This attempt to connect TS Eliot’s great modernist poem with paintings by Hopper, Twombly and more ends up feeling like a stilted stagger through the shards of a masterpiece
TS Eliot would have loathed this exhibition. The English language’s great 20th-century poet was a proud elitist. His 1922 masterwork The Waste Land is full of contempt for what he saw as the vulgar culture of jumped-up commoners:
“He, the young man carbuncular, arrives,
A small house agent’s clerk, with one bold stare,
One of the low on whom assurance sits
As a silk hat on a Bradford millionaire.”
The stillborn attempts at thirdhand cubism hit you like a wet fish
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Published on February 02, 2018 07:58