Friday 23 December 2016

This years edit - art 2016























It's been a good year for exhibitions in London, although my favourite was actually in Melbourne in January.  Manifesto by Julian Rosefeldt is a multi-screen video installation, showing a collage of art history manifestos, including Futurism, Dadaism and Pop Art.  Each is presented by Cate Blanchett, who transforms into characters ranging from a teacher, a scientist, a movie star and a homeless man.  It is clever, beautiful and hypnotic, and I hope it comes to London at some point.

The Radical Eye is an exhibition at Tate Modern (still on!) showcasing modernist photography from Elton John's collection.  Exquisite and fascinating images, beautifully curated.

The National Portrait Gallery's exhibition of William Eggleston photographs was small but perfectly formed.

Yayoi Kusama at Victoria Miro was an instagrammer's dream but also a beautiful show full of depth and intrigue.

I had never heard of Georgiana Houghton before seeing her exhibition at the Courtauld Gallery and I became immediately hooked on her story.  A Victorian medium, she painted 'spirit drawings' which she produced while 'possessed' by spirits.  Her work is fascinating and years ahead of its time.

Monday 12 December 2016

This year's edit - TV 2016























With honorable mentions to Planet Earth II, Happy Valley, Grayson Perry: All Man, The Great British Bake Off, War and Peace, The Crown, the wonderful last season of Parks and Recreation and the magnificent Danny Dyer episode of Who Do You Think You Are?, my favourite TV shows of 2016 were:

The third series of Line of Duty has perfected its formula, with shocks, surprises and brilliant performances all round.

Crazy Ex-Girlfriend is a Netflix gem - weird and wonderful musical (I know) romcom starring the utterly marvellous Rachel Bloom.

Veep has hit new heights in its fifth season, as Selina Meyer finally becomes POTUS, although it is sobering how the supremely ridiculous fictional events have been reflected in real life since transmission.

The Night Manager, obviously.

Stranger Things is pretty indescribable. Weird/twisted/overhyped/pastiche/homage, this horror series is addictive, however you want to describe it.






Monday 5 December 2016

This year's edit - film 2016












It's that time of year again.  The wine is mulling, the pies are mincing and my jeans are tightening.  2016 has been a truly atrocious year in many many respects, both political and personal, but I have loved spending time in a darkened room watching some fantastic films.  My Top Ten Films of the Year (in no particular order) are:

Hail, Caesar! which I've now watched twice and I adored every second of it both times.  Channing Tatum tapdancing, George Clooney playing the idiot and Scarlett Johansson playing a screwball Hollywood diva.  And that's not even mentioning the utterly wonderful Ralph Fiennes.  Also, hands down my favourite trailer of the year.

Actually no, my favourite trailer might be for the brilliant High Rise.  Incredibly stylish and inventive, and a perfect interpretation of J G Ballard's 'unfilmable' novel, which is one of my favourites of all time.

Back to the magnificent Ralph Fiennes - his performance as a narcissistic music producer in A Bigger Splash was one of the best of the year.  Tilda Swinton is perfection, as always, in a mostly silent role.

Everybody Wants Some!! is so much fun but also has a deceptive depth to it.  It cements Richard Linklater is one of my very favourite directors.

Love & Friendship is a Walt Stillman adaptation of a Jane Austen, which is turns out is what we've all been waiting for.  It is a total delight, full of sharp wit and wonderfully hilarious performances.

Switching mood entirely, I have never cried as much in a cinema as I did at Room, tears of sadness, tension and joy.  I'm not sure I will ever put myself through the stress of watching it again but it is a beautiful and intensely moving film that deserves all the plaudits it has gained.


The technical aspect of Victoria (it was filmed all in one take) is impressive but it was the exuberance of the performances and the skillful ratcheting of tension that won me over.

Arrival is more than a sci-fi movie.  it's an intelligent look at ideas and language and love and loss which is intensely moving and beautiful.

Hunt of the Wilderpeople was my unexpected gem of 2016. Hilarious and poignant, everyone should see it.

American Honey is a freewheeling languorous road trip movie, beautifully directed by Andrea Arnold and beautifully performed by a cast of mostly unknowns, with a wonderful use of music.

And if you'll permit me, I'll sneak in the utterly glorious La La Land, which I saw at the London Film Festival and which has its full release in January 2017.  More about this in the New Year...

Monday 28 November 2016

This week's edit - 28th November 2016














Reading
I've just started Step Up by Phanella Mayall Fine and Alice Olins and I'm hoping it lives up to its strapline 'Confidence, success and your stellar career in 10 minutes a day'.

Watching
Who Do You Think You Are with Danny Dyer was extraordinarily fun TV.  Find it on iPlayer, please.  And sign up to Netflix for the new episodes of Gilmore Girls which are the perfect antidote to the current #hellinahandcart state of the world.

Seeing
Abstract Expressionism at the Royal Academy is a patchy show, with some real highlights.  The Jackson Pollock and Clyfford Still rooms are glorious and I could have spent hours there sinking into each painting in turn.

Monday 21 November 2016

This week's edit - 21st November 2016










I've been housebound for the past few weeks so have very little to report in terms of arts and culture that involve leaving the sofa.  Instead here is a list of some of the things I plan to see between now and the end of the year:

On stage
Bridget Christie is one of my favourite comedians and her latest show Because You Demanded It will undoubtedly be a hilarious tirade about Brexit and the state of the world today.

I would watch Mark Rylance read the telephone directory (do telephone directories still exist?) so I am excited to see his latest West End outing, Nice Fish.  Also, his announcement that the first four people to turn up each day dressed as fish or fishermen will get free tickets brings me great joy.


In the gallery
I should have seen the Royal Academy's Abstract Expressionism exhibition by now, but it's on the list and I've heard good things.

Likewise, The Radical Eye - Tate Modern's exhibition of Elton John's photography collection - sounds right up my street.


In the cinema
Passengers stars Jennifer Lawrence, Chris Pratt and Michael Sheen and is set in space.  What more do you want from a film opening the week before Christmas?


On my sofa
I've just started reading Swing Time by Zadie Smith and I'm already loving it.

The wonderful
Gilmore Girls are back on Netflix and I can't wait to get stuck into the upcoming four 90 minute episodes.

Monday 14 November 2016

This week's edit - 14th November 2016

















Watching
Arrival is a film we all need this month.  Beautiful, gripping, moving and thought-provoking, it is one of my films of the year.  (Full review to follow).

Reading
Nomad by Alan Partridge is the funniest book I've read this year.  Even better is the audiobook.  A perfect Christmas gift I reckon.

Listening
My usual favourite podcasts have been keeping me going recently and I've also thoroughly enjoyed the Adam Buxton podcast.


Monday 24 October 2016

This week's edit - 24th October 2016















Seeing
Philippe Parreno's installation in the Turbine Hall at Tate Modern is fascinating and immersive.  Called 'Anywhen', it is a constantly changing and evolving combination of lights, sound, moving sculptural shapes and will be different every time you visit.

Watching
American Honey is one of my favourite films so far this year.  A sun-bleached freewheeling beautiful road trip with stunning performances from its cast of mostly unknowns, it is prompting me to go back and look at director Andrea Arnold's earlier films, of which I have only seen the brilliant Fish Tank.

Reading
I can seemingly never have enough cookbooks and Simple by Diana Henry is the newest addition to my collection.  I love it and am quickly working my way through the simple tasty and healthy recipes.

Tuesday 18 October 2016

This week's edit - 17th October 2016

















Reading
A Poem for Every Night of the Year does exactly what it says on the tin and is a beautiful looking book as well.

Seeing
Philippe Parreno at Tate Modern is intriguing, thought-provoking and challenging.  Aiming to give the viewer a different experience every time they visit, its combination of lights, sound, installation and video creates a weirdly calm and atmospheric mood in the Turbine Hall.

Watching
My last London Film Festival viewing was the premiere gala of Tom Ford's second film, Nocturnal Animals.  Gripping and stylish, it has shades of Hitchcock and I highly recommend it.

Monday 10 October 2016

This week's edit - 10th October 2016

















Watching
It's London Film Festival time!  So far, I have seen two wonderful films, both of which will be on general release over the next few months.  A United Kingdom is based on the true story of a white woman from London who falls in love and marries Seretse Khama, a future King from Botswana, in the 1940s.  It is warm and romantic and moving.

La La Land is my favourite film so far this year.  A musical romance which is nostalgic for the Golden Age of Hollywood, yet somehow also contemporary and inventive, it is beautiful, dazzling, warm, funny and full of real chemistry between the leads Ryan Gosling and Emma Stone.

Seeing
Picasso Portraits at the National Portrait Gallery is a fascinating exhibition, showing the breadth of Picasso's genius.  I particularly enjoyed a display of three portraits of three women, each using a completely different style to draw out their personalities and characteristics.

Reading
Where'd You Go Bernadette by Maria Semple was one of favourite books of recent years, so I am very much looking forward to getting stuck into her next novel, Today Will Be Different.


Monday 26 September 2016

This week's edit - 26th September 2016


















Watching
Hunt for the Wilderpeople is a total joy and I totally adored it. Set in beautiful New Zealand countryside, it is very funny, clever, odd and poignant film with wonderful performances all round.

Seeing
A small but perfect exhibition of William Eggleston portraits is currently at the National Portrait Gallery (until 23rd October).  Eggleston's intriguing and beautiful photographs are well worth seeing.

Reading
The Trespasser by Tana French.  I love French's Irish crime novels and this latest one is proving her most gripping yet.

Listening
I am currently laughing my way through the My Dad Wrote A Porno podcast, which is entirely Not Suitable For Work but very very funny.


Monday 19 September 2016

Autumn Art Preview

















Generally speaking, the autumn is a strong time for new exhibitions in London, mostly because galleries plan the highlights of their programmes to coincide with the behemoth Frieze Art Fair at the start of October when hordes of international art dealers and collectors descend on the city for a few days.  This autumn, I'm looking forward to:

Frieze Art Fair and Frieze Masters
I have a love/hate relationship with Frieze - it is a fantastic opportunity to catch up on trends in contemporary art and get inspiration for work projects, but it is too expensive, too big, too hot and too full of 'art people'.  

Abstract Expressionism
Major works by Jackson Pollock, Willem de Kooning and Mark Rothko, amongst others, will no doubt be stunningly presented at the Royal Academy.

William Kentridge
I find William Kentridge's work fascinating so am looking forward to this show at the Whitechapel Gallery.

Wifredo Lam
Cuban artist Wifredo Lam is the subject of this retrospective exhibition at Tate Modern.

Turner Prize
Sometimes controversial and often disappointing, the Turner Prize exhibition at Tate Britain is still a must-see.



This week's edit - 19th September 2016

























Seeing
I was a little sceptical about the idea of a musical version of Groundhog Day, but relaxed completely when I heard it was in the hands of Tim Minchin.  I saw it last week and it is truly special, hilarious with fantastic songs, great performances and wonderful production design.  Its run at the Old Vic has now finished and it's off to Broadway, but it is bound to come back to the West End so get ready to book tickets when it does.

Reading
Ann Patchett is one of my favourite authors and her new novel Commonwealth is a beautifully written, engaging and thoughtful story of two families and their shared fate.

Booking
There is some cracking theatre coming up this autumn.  I have my grubby little paws on tickets for Oil (Almeida Theatre), Lazarus (Kings Cross Theatre), The Red Barn (National Theatre) and Nice Fish (Harold Pinter Theatre).  Plus my comedy favourites, Bridget Christie (Leicester Square Theatre) and the Pajama Men (Soho Theatre).

Public booking for the London Film Festival is now open so get moving!  I could easily spend the whole festival in a darkened cinema but my diary and bank balance have forced me to restrict myself somewhat.  La La Land, Nocturnal Animals and A United Kingdom have all had wonderful reviews and are firmly in my diary, plus Trespass Against Us (not such great reviews but Fassbender, so you know... *shrugs*).

Monday 5 September 2016

This week's edit - 5th September 2016























Seeing
The i360 is a new observation tower in Brighton.  162 metres tall, it is a stunning piece of design and engineering and obviously has wonderful views across the sea and South Downs.

Watching
Cafe Society is Woody Allen's latest film and it is somewhere in the middle between his best works and his worst.  It's lightweight and forgettable but with a lovely central performance from Kristen Stewart and some truly beautiful styling and cinematography.

Reading
Amy Schumer's first book, The Girl with the Lower Back Tattoo, is exactly what you'd expect - hilarious, heartfelt and frank to the point of embarrassment.  I thoroughly enjoyed it.  I saw her do her standup live this weekend too, and that's where she really excels.

Booking
The BFI London Film Festival programme has been announced and booking opens to the public on 15th September.  Priorities for me and my ticket booking fingers will be La La Land, Nocturnal Animals, Arrival and Free Fire.

Listening
This week is #trialweek on The Archers, the culmination of the slow-burning story of domestic abuse and coercive control between Rob and Helen.  It's clearly well-researched and powerful stuff.

Tuesday 23 August 2016

This week's edit - 22nd August 2016

Visiting
Fashion Cities Africa is a small but fascinating exhibition at Brighton Museum and Art Gallery dedicated to contemporary fashion from Nairobi, Johannesburg, Lagos and Casablanca.

Reading
Before the Fall by Noah Hawley is a compelling and twisty-turny thriller from the writer of my beloved Fargo TV series.  I loved it.

Watching
Stranger Things is a slow-burning but addictive supernatural Netflix drama, set in the 1980s which delights in its constant and obvious homages to Stephen King films and other 80s tropes.

Listening
Edith Bowman's Soundtracking podcast interviews film directors about their use of music.  Essential listening for film buffs.








Monday 15 August 2016

This week's edit - 15th August 2016




















Read
I See You by Clare Mackintosh is the creepiest book I've read in a long time.  It has a very clever central premise and I suspect it will say with me for some weeks.

See
The Sicily: Culture and Conquest exhibition at the British Museum has just finished, so sorry I haven't flagged it up in time, but I managed to visit this week and it was an absolutely fascinating insight into the early history of the island and the impact of Greek and Norman occupation.

There is still time to see Daydreaming with Stanley Kubrick at Somerset House.  A curated exhibition of contemporary art inspired by or related to the films of Kubrick, this show is a bit of a mixed bag but the highlights are worth seeing, including a film installation called The Corridor by Toby Dye (above) and The Shining Carpet by Adam Broomberg and Oliver Chanarin, as well as works by Doug Aitken and Julian Rosefeldt.

Watch
The Olympics.  Is there anything else??!

Mustang is a beautiful and atmospheric film about five sisters in Turkey coming of age.  Highly recommended.


This week's edit - 15th August 2016




















Read
I See You by Clare Mackintosh is the creepiest book I've read in a long time.  It has a very clever central premise and I suspect it will say with me for some weeks.

See
The Sicily: Culture and Conquest exhibition at the British Museum has just finished, so sorry I haven't flagged it up in time, but I managed to visit this week and it was an absolutely fascinating insight into the early history of the island and the impact of Greek and Norman occupation.

There is still time to see Daydreaming with Stanley Kubrick at Somerset House.  A curated exhibition of contemporary art inspired by or related to the films of Kubrick, this show is a bit of a mixed bag but the highlights are worth seeing, including a film installation called The Corridor by Toby Dye (above) and The Shining Carpet by Adam Broomberg and Oliver Chanarin, as well as works by Doug Aitken and Julian Rosefeldt.

Watch
Mustang is a beautiful and atmospheric film about five sisters in Turkey coming of age.  Highly recommended.


Monday 8 August 2016

This week's edit - 8th August 2016




















Read
Modern Lovers by Emma Straub is a great read, with beautifully drawn characters and a real sense of place.

Watch
The BFG is an utter joy, full of warmth and humour and carried by wonderful lead performances from Mark Rylance and Ruby Barnhill.  Definitely not just one for the kids (and not just because I couldn't find any to take with me - "too babyish" for my nephews apparently!)

See
Not long left now to see the Summer Exhibition at the Royal Academy.  Always a mixed bag, this year seemed to me to be more coherent than normal, and I loved work by Yinka Shonibare, Jock McFadyen and Hannah Starkey in particular.

Tuesday 2 August 2016

The Palma Edit



















The Arts Edit
The cathedral in Palma is beautiful and well worth the queues (even better if you can go early when it's almost empty).  The Fondacion Bartolome March is worth a visit - it's a beautiful but strange house with a programme of temporary exhibitions inside and in the garden, currently showing prints by Salvador Dali and sculpture by artists including Henry Moore, Barbara Hepworth and Auguste Rodin.

The Food and Drink Edit
I haven’t eaten often in Palma but can recommend the small outside cafe just by the entrance to the Fondacion Bartolome March which does excellent p’amb oli, and sushi from the fish market is totally fantastic. The best bars and cafes/tapas places are in the streets behind the Passeig Born and Bar Abaco is a 'must-see' if only for its unique decoration.  The best tapas I've had was at Ombu, and although I have never managed to go, I’ve heard really good things about the food at Simply Fosh.

The Shopping Edit
Sluiz Ibiza, tucked away down a backstreet near Passeig Born, is a vast labyrinth of cool hippyish clothing and homewares I'd bulk buy if I owned my dream house in Mallorca.

How to use Twitter and not go mad











I love Twitter.  I love its inclusiveness.  I love tweeting and reading tweets during big TV and cultural moments.  I love getting tips and reviews of books, films, restaurants and exhibitions I would never think of engaging with.  I love being able to safely vent my anger at the current political maelstrom (#hellinahandcart).  And I love sharing the joy of watching Chris Froome running up Mont Ventoux during the Tour de France, while I'm working alone at my kitchen table.

I understand why so many people don't 'get' Twitter.  I don't love the trite 'Why Taylor Swift Loves Avocado on Toast' articles and, at the other end of the scale, I don't love the anger and the picking fights for no reason and the general hatred aimed at others.

So to keep it fun, and avoid the madness, I follow art critics I respect (@adriansearle, @januszczak), film critics I usually agree with (@robbiereviews and @markkermode) and writers with similar taste in books to me (@hemmo, @sambaker and @indiaknight).  Aside from that, I follow my favourite restaurants, museums, cinemas, friends and people who make me laugh.  I never tweet anything I wouldn't say to someone's face.  And that's it.  No drama, no histrionics, no trolling and no avocado on toast.  #perfect

@kathmellor

Monday 1 August 2016

This week's edit - 1st August 2016

























See
Georgiana Houghton was a Victorian medium who painted under the 'instruction' of ghosts including Titian.  The exhibition of her work at the beautiful Courtauld Gallery is an absolute joy - fascinating and visually striking, her work is before its time in its abstraction and symbolism.

Watch
Weiner is a fascinating documentary about former congressman Anthony Weiner and his attempted political comeback after a sexting scandal.

Read
Liane Moriarty is a very underrated writer and her latest novel, Truly Madly Guilty, is a perfect sunlounger read.  She writes beautifully readable plot-twisting domestic thrillers, and creates believable and imperfect female characters.



Monday 25 July 2016

This week's edit - 25th July 2016


Watch
The new Jason Bourne film opens this week and promises great things, bringing Matt Damon and director Paul Greengrass back together.

See
David Hockney: 82 Portraits and 1 Still Life at the Royal Academy is BUSY so book in advance but it's a lovely small show of his recent portraits.  Each subject is painted sitting in the same chair, with the same background and within the same three-day timeframe.  Hockney's skill is in bringing each personality to the fore and the portraits exude warmth and joy. 

Listen
As a West Wing addict and US politics junkie, I am becoming quickly obsessed with The West Wing Weekly podcast.

Read
Lie With Me by Sabine Durrant is a page turning piece of griplit, perfect for your sun lounger.

Monday 11 July 2016

This week's edit - 11th July 2016


Reflector by Alex Katz



















See
Alex Katz is an American octogenarian painter, who is best known for his portraits painted simply in flat bright colours.  This exhibition at the Serpentine Gallery focuses primarily on his landscape paintings which are exquisite.  Full of light and depth, their immediate simplicity is deceiving.

Read
Black Water by Louise Doughty.  I loved Doughty's last book Apple Tree Yard, and her latest could not be more different.  I can't put it down.

Watch
I love Greta Gerwig and I REALLY love Julianne Moore so Maggie's Plan is an absolute treat. A warm, witty and intelligent romcom.

Listen
Michael Kiwanuka's new album is out later this week and I can't wait for it to appear on my phone.

Sunday 10 July 2016

This week's edit - 18th July 2016


See
Georgia O'Keefe at Tate Modern is a fascinating exhibition, challenging the myths that have grown around her work and showing a huge range of paintings and drawings from throughout her career.

Read
The Muse by Jessie Burton is next on my list, because I loved her first book The Miniaturist.

Watch
I'm off to see Ghostbusters this evening so watch this space...

Listen
Old school Blondie is my soundtrack for this beautiful hot and sunny week.

Monday 4 July 2016

This week's edit - 4th July 2016


























See
The new Switch House extension at Tate Modern is a real treat.  The gallery spaces are large, airy and considerately curated and the views from the new Members Room and viewing gallery are glorious.  I expect I will be spending a lot of time there this summer.

Read
Saturday Requiem by Nicci French is the sixth in the series of crime novels about Frieda Klein.  Gripping and well-written, I've been looking forward to this instalment since the last.

Watch
Tale of Tales is a fabulous, glorious and intoxicatingly bonkers film - a mad and beautiful fairy tale for grown ups.  I loved it, in particular the performances by Salma Hayek and the wonderful wonderful Toby Jones.

Listen
I'm mostly catching up on all the Glastonbury coverage that I missed while I was on holiday.  Christine and the Queens seems to have gone down well, which is great news because I predicted big things for her having downloaded her album, Chaleur Humaine, some weeks ago.

Friday 1 July 2016

Summer Reading
















As well as the usual mediocre 'grip-lit', I read three really great, and very different, books on holiday last week.

The Girls by Emma Cline is atmospheric, chilling and eminently readable. Perfect holiday reading.

Nina Stibbe's Paradise Lodge has been my favourite holiday read so far this summer.  A sort-of sequel to Man at the Helm, it is joyful, warm, wonderful and laugh out loud funny.

Curtain Call by Anthony Quinn is just fantastic.  A witty and nuanced murder mystery set in 1930s London, I absolutely loved it and have already downloaded Quinn's follow-up, Freya.




Tuesday 14 June 2016

This week's edit - 13th June 2016

























Watch
Netflix has new seasons of Bloodline (already viewable) and Orange is the New Black (available from Friday), which puts a bit of a dampner on my social life for the foreseeable future.

Read
Mad Girl by Bryony Gordon is an unflinchingly honest read about the author's life and mental health.  It is important and heart-breaking but also very funny and I cannot recommend it highly enough.

Listen
Ladyhawke's self-titled album from 2008 is one of my all-time favourites, and her new release Wild Things is my sound of the summer.

See
Yayoi Kusama is a fascinating artist and her immersive, thoughtful and perfectly instagrammable exhibition at Victoria Miro is a huge hit, with queues out of the door.  Go early to ensure you can get in.


This week's edit will be back on Monday 4th July.  Happy Holidays to me!

Tuesday 7 June 2016

This week's edit - 6th June 2016















Watch
The Nice Guys is a real treat, with a sharp script and gorgeous costume and production design.  Ryan Gosling is hilarious, and somehow still hot in spite of his pratfalls and ridiculous 70s facial hair.  How does he do that?

Listen
My new favourite podcast is 'You Must Remember This'.  Hours of old Hollywood intrigue to keep me company as I walk around town.

See
I have yet to visit (gallery day tomorrow), but I am told that Martin Parr's exhibition of photography at the Barbican is fantastic and definitely worth seeing.

Read
I am thoroughly enjoying The House at Midnight by Lucie Whitehouse and, in a rare occurrence for me, I have absolutely no idea where the story is going.

Monday 30 May 2016

This week's edit - 30th May 2016















Watch
Love and Friendship is a total delight from start to finish.  The director, Walt Stillman, made one of my all-time favourite films, The Last Days of Disco, and now he reunites the two stars of that film, Kate Beckinsale and Chloe Sevigny, in a Jane Austen adaptation.  I'll be honest, I knew I was going to love it even before I walked into the cinema.  It is perfect.  Full to the brim of brilliant performances, throwaway period detail and caustic venomous wit.  An utter joy.

Listen
I'm still listening to nothing other than Prince, to be honest.  Mostly my favourites on a loop but occasionally his most recent album, HITnRUN Phase 2, which is fantastic.

See
Mona Hatoum is such an intelligent artist and her exhibition at Tate Modern is a must see for anyone interested in contemporary art.  Dealing with themes both personal and political, global and intimate, her work is fascinating and thought-provoking.

Read
I'm trying to narrow down my reading list for my holiday next month.  I read A LOT when I'm on holiday and the brilliance of the kindle is that I don't have to weigh down my suitcase but I do get a bit obsessive with ensuring I have a good balance of literary/popular/crime/comedy/etc/etc (although if I'm honest the books I enjoy most generally blur all of those categories).  My first pick is the book of Love and Friendship by Walt Stillman (see above) - perfect poolside reading.

Monday 23 May 2016

This week's edit - 23rd May 2016















Read
I have loved all of Maggie O'Farrell's novels and her latest, This Must Be The Place, is proving to be her best yet.

Watch
Florence Foster Jenkins is a total joy.  Based on the true story of "the world's worst singer", it is hilarious but also very poignant and moving.  

Listen
The Mystery Show podcast is a new discovery and I'm completely smitten.

See
Missoni Art Colour at the Fashion and Textile Museum is just gorgeous.



Monday 16 May 2016

This week's edit 16th May 2016




















Watch
Everybody Wants Some!! is my favourite film of 2016 so far (with Hail, Caesar! a close second - clearly extraneous exclamation marks are doing it for me this year).  A hilarious look at a bunch of hormonal eighteen year old boys starting college in 1980, its nostalgia for the period is pitch perfect.  Beyond the surface though, is a thoughtful exploration of hidden vulnerabilities and how we find ourselves within a group of peers.


Read
First Bite by Bee Wilson is a fascinating insight into the way we learn to eat and how we can change and shape our eating habits.


See
George Shaw has been Associate Artist at the National Gallery for the past two years and his new exhibition My Back to Nature is full of beautiful, witty and thoughtful paintings based on his exploration of the collection.

Just around the corner at the National Portrait Gallery, Vogue 100: A Century of Style is an exhibition showing the history of Vogue covers and photography.  Iconic images are everywhere you look.


Listen
Although I fundamentally disagree with them about Everybody Wants Some!! (see above), Simon Mayo and Mark Kermode's Film Review on BBC Radio 5 Live every Friday afternoon is a must-listen.

Friday 29 April 2016

This week's edit - 8th May 2016




Read
Not Working by Lisa Owens is a funny and insightful look into the life of a twenty-something woman who feels she should be doing something worthwhile with her life and can't find what that thing is. We've all been there.

Listen
A few pre-released tracks from Laura Mvula's new album, released in June, have reminded me what a wonderful talent she is.  Perfect sunshine tunes.

See
Just a few more days left to see Hilma af Klint at the Serpentine Galleries.  This wonderfully forward-thinking female Swedish artist was a pioneer of abstract art in the early 20th century but was hardly known before the 1980s.

Watch 
The Good Wife is drawing to a close after seven seasons (sob).  Possibly the most consistently great of American dramas, I will miss it hugely. The only solution is to start watching again from the beginning.

Thursday 28 April 2016

This week's edit - 2nd May 2016

Read
When She Was Bad by Tammy Cohen comes under the genre of 'griplit' - I just couldn't put it down and didn't see the twist coming AT ALL. 

Watch
There is still time to catch up on the first four seasons of Veep before the fifth starts on Sky Atlantic tonight. It is such a joy and the funniest smartest show on tv, especially for an American politics junkie like me.

I will be slightly pacified on Thursday night without Line of Duty by the return of the stylish and gripping Peaky Blinders. 

Listen
It's finally happened - I have started listening to The Archers. The daily podcast keeps me sane and calm on my walks into town. 

See 
Botticelli Reimagined at the V&A is a fascinating show which goes beyond the work of Botticelli itself, although there is a gorgeous amount of that, to explore its influence on art, fashion and design of the centuries since his death. 

Monday 25 April 2016

RIP Prince

















This post is hard to write so I've put it off and come back to it a few times.  I loved Prince.  He was my favourite musician, by a country mile.  About half of the tracks on my 'Favourites' iTunes playlist are his, and that was me editing hard.  I was lucky enough to see him live three times and those gigs remain the best I have ever seen.  Most recently, I saw him play at the Roundhouse in Camden in June 2014 with an audience of only 1,700.  It was phenomenal.  I mean, really phenomenal.  The musicianship, the showmanship, the energy and emotion.  I could think or talk about little else for days, and I feel much the same now.  I simply can't believe or accept that I won't see him live again.  I'm so sad. RIP Beautiful One.



This week's edit - 25th April 2016
























Read
Curtis Sittenfield's Eligible is a total JOY and I can't recommend it highly enough if you're a fan of Pride and Prejudice and/or smart American fiction.

Watch
The final episode of Line of Duty is on BBC2 on Thursday.  How I can start to describe how good Line of Duty is?  Twisting and turning plots keep you on your toes from minute one, the performances are stunning and the writing is superb.  I honestly think it's the best thing on British TV in YEARS.

Listen
The shock of Prince's unexpected and premature death last week has broken a bit of my heart but 6Music have hit the happy/sad sweet spot for me in their tributes.  Find Lauren Laverne's show on Friday and Sunday's Craig Charles on Prince special on the BBC Radio iPlayer and enjoy his genius.

See
Pick Me Up is an annual exhibition at Somerset House - or as they describe it, a graphic arts festival. Full of emerging illustrators, designers and graphic artists, it's a fantastic place to pick up some fun and inexpensive art for your home.

Thursday 21 April 2016

This week I am...


... mourning Victoria Wood.  She was a true idol of mine.  At one school prize day a hundred or so years ago, we were asked to choose a book as our prize.  I chose a collection of her scripts.  Her wit and empathy shine through her writing. Only last week I was quoting word for word with a friend from Is It On The Trolley? and Two Soups has become part of my family's vocabulary.

... being mildly disturbed by The Maids at Trafalgar Studios.  A very strange but powerful play by Jean Genet, with strong performances by Zawe Ashton, Laura Carmichael and Uzo Aduba.

... pre-ordering my holiday reading.  No, I'm not going for eight weeks but it's good to be prepared right?  New books by Maggie O'Farrell, Emma Cline, Nicci French, Nina Stibbe and Jessie Burton will be popping up on my kindle over the summer...

Friday 15 April 2016

This week I am...















... bingeing on Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt, the second series of the hilarious Netflix comedy from Tina Fey with the catchiest theme tune EVER.

... looking forward to next week's book releases - Not Working by Lisa Owens has been recommended by all my favourite book tweeters, and Eligible by Curtis Sittenfeld which is being touted as the 'book of the summer'.  A modern retelling of Pride and Prejudice, I have already planned an afternoon on the sofa next Friday to read this.

Wednesday 13 April 2016

Reading material

















I don't normally hold much truck with book awards but I've read three of the six books on this year's Baileys Women's Prize for Fiction so here are my thoughts:

The Portable Veblen by Elizabeth McKenzie is a quirky but easy to read novel which I am very surprised to find on the list.  I loved it - one for fans of Where'd You Go Bernadette and other slight oddities.

I hated A Little Life by Hanya Yanagihara but still read it in its entirety which is unusual for me as I have the attention span of a toddler and will delete an unsatisfying book from my kindle at the drop of a hat.  Relentlessly depressing and traumatic, I still can't identify what kept me reading and I have no intention of picking it up again to do any further analysis.

The Impossibility of Love by Hannah Rothschild is featherlight but whips along at pace and with style.  I loved all the London art world details and Rothschild's passion for, and knowledge of, art shines through.


Thursday 7 April 2016

Victoria

Victoria is an immersive, adrenaline-fueled two and a quarter hour ride through a night out in Berlin. Shot in one continuous take, it is a remarkable feat, but is not a gimmicky film or one trick pony.  The long tracking shot immerses us in the world and actions of the characters and builds a momentum and sense of exhilaration/exhaustion which helps us understand the (very bad) decisions Victoria makes.

This week I am...





















... ill with the flu bug that WON'T DIE.  Two days ill, two days fine, two days ill.  So so tedious.

... binge-watching Transparent, which is both hilarious and moving.

... settling in with a good book.  Who's That Girl by the brilliant Mhairi Macfarlane appeared on my kindle over night so I'm dragging the duvet onto the sofa this afternoon, mainlining lemsip and diving in.

... contemplating a diet.  Or rather - contemplating stepping up my new health regime.  I am LOVING reformer pilates more and more each class and really noticing the difference it's making to my strength and flexibility.  And my running progress is slow and steady.  So maybe I'll up the ante slightly with the help of Elly Pear's Fast Days and Feast Days, which looks right up my street.






Thursday 31 March 2016

This week I am...















... working too hard to have much time for anything else, but luckily, I'm loving my job, clients and colleagues.


... reading Lucie Whitehouse's Keep You Close, a tightly-written piece of grip-lit about the unexpected death of an artist.


... watching American TV - The Good Wife, Parks & Recreation and Girls are filling the time spent waiting between episodes of Line of Duty very nicely.


... getting my heart warmed by Eddie the Eagle, a straightforward honest feel good film.






Monday 21 March 2016

This week I am...













... looking forward to yet more brilliant BBC drama
Line of Duty was my favourite drama of 2014 and I am extremely excited about series 3 starting on Thursday.

... pondering film trailers
I loved both Hail, Caesar! and High Rise but in both circumstances can't help thinking the trailers were actually better than the films.

Hail, Caesar!
High Rise

... reading stories set in the art world
There seem to be a glut of novels set in or around the commercial art scene at the moment.  The Improbability of Love by Hannah Rothschild (chairwoman of the National Gallery) is excellent and I'm about to dip my toe into Maestra by LS Hilton.

... discovering Hilma af Klimt
The Swedish pioneering abstract artist has a fantastic exhibition at the Serpentine Gallery.

High Rise

Judging by the reactions of my friends, High Rise is an acquired taste. Maybe one for J G Ballard fans only. I loved it. Surreal and stylish, and refusing to follow any storytelling rules, it's a perfect adaptation of one of my favourite books. 

Tuesday 15 March 2016

This week I am...

























... watching brilliant BBC drama
If you're not watching The Night Manager and Happy Valley, you're a fool.  Utterly brilliant in their own ways and worth the licence fee and then some.

... reading 'grip-lit'
Missing, Presumed by Susie Steiner is gripping, and The Woman Who Ran by Sam Baker is unputdownable.

... listening to stunning voices
I saw Lianne La Havas at the Royal Albert Hall last night and she was just perfection.  Laura Mvula's new track is on repeat too.

... revisiting old favourites
It's been many years since I've thought much about Botticelli but with two exhibitions currently in London (V&A and Courtauld), I'm dusting off my textbooks and university notes.

... looking forward to a summer of music
Ludovico Einaudi and Guy Garvey at the Royal Festival Hall, Everything Everything and Laura Mvula at Somerset House, Duran Duran in the Oxfordshire countryside - who needs to go on holiday?





Anomalisa















Anomalisa is an odd film, as you'd expect from Charlie Kaufman, the maker of Being John Malkovich and Adaptation.  I didn't really know what to expect, because the film critics I respect and usually agree with, were very divided on whether it is a masterpiece or an unsuccessful oddity.  It is certainly a technical triumph, taking stop-motion animation to a new level, and I found it very intriguing and also funny in places. It's short at only 90 minutes, which is always a bonus for me given my increasingly pathetic attention span. However it didn't reach 'masterpiece' for me.

Hail, Caesar!


Oh my, I loved Hail, Caesar!, although I can see it could be a marmite film for some.  Basically a series of immaculate set pieces taking place on the movie lots of Old Hollywood, it is loosely drawn together by a paper thin and somewhat nonsensical plot, but really who cares when you have such joys as Channing Tatum tap dancing up a storm in my favourite film scene of the year so far.  And Alden Ehrenreich lighting up the screen with his every move.  Plus Clooney in brilliant idiot mode, and Ralph Fiennes being frankly perfect.  The Coen brothers are geniuses, obviously, and while this isn't their best or most striking film, it is SO MUCH FUN I can't wait to watch it again. 

Wednesday 24 February 2016

Spotlight





















I'm not entirely sure why Spotlight achieved so much acclaim.  It is moving, sure, and thought-provoking and sobering, but to me it felt like a very old-fashioned film.  I will remember the facts and the story but not the film, in spite of great ensemble performances.

My Oscars (the Katherines, if you like...)
















I'm stuck at home with a rotten cold/flu bug when I should be out working, lunching and pilatesing (totally a word), so I got to thinking about the Oscars on Sunday.  I'm not a fan of award ceremonies in general, although I do love a browse through the red carpet photos the following day, but an old friend of mine and I used to email each other our award lists every year (actually I think we started doing it by fax before the days of email 😱).  So for what it's worth, these are the winners of the 2016 Katherines (and I like to think that Jill would agree with me if she was still with us...)

NB I am hoping to see The Big Short tomorrow if I can stop coughing for long enough to leave the house, so I reserve the right to completely change my mind about all of this...

Best film
Room

Best director
Lenny Abrahamson for Room

Best actor
Michael Fassbender for Steve Jobs (SURPRISE! Although I actually thought his Macbeth was even better and should have been nominated.)

Best actress
Brie Larson for Room

Best supporting actor
Mark Ruffalo for Spotlight

Best supporting actress
Rooney Mara for Carol (Alicia Vikander should have been nominated for Ex Machina, and Julie Walters for Brooklyn)

Best animated film
Inside Out (really looking forward to Anomalisa though)

Best cinematography
The Revenant

Best original screenplay
Inside Out

Best adapted screenplay
Brooklyn

Best costume design
Carol (with an honourable mention for Crimson Peak, which should have been nominated)

Monday 15 February 2016

A Bigger Splash


I loved A Bigger Splash.  Tilda Swinton is on stunning form (although let's be honest, when isn't she?) and I would die for her wardrobe and eyeliner skills.  Ralph Fiennes is a revelation, showing a new side as an obnoxious loudmouth extrovert.  Dakota Johnson plays a young and scheming flirt perfectly and Matthias Schoenaerts is as gorgeous as the scenery. The sun-drenched Italian style makes this a joy to watch, a feast for the eyes.

Tuesday 9 February 2016

The Melbourne Edit


I love Melbourne.  Truly, if it was nearer to my friends and family in the UK, I would move there in a heartbeat.  I am lucky enough to have a very lovely and excellent friend there who I visit as often as I can, giving me the perfect excuse to explore one of my favourite cities as a 'local' rather than a tourist.  So I can't tell you about hotels, but I can recommend things to do, see, eat and buy in Melbourne.

The Arts Edit

























Melbourne has a thriving contemporary art scene, but my first stop on every visit is the National Gallery of Victoria.  The NGV has two sites, one of which highlights international art and often has fantastic temporary exhibtitions.  The second site at Federation Square has an amazing collection of Australian art, including some wonderful indigenous work.

ACMI, or the Australian Centre for the Moving Image, is also situated at Federation Square, and has a truly fantastic exhibition programme.  My last two visits have introduced me to video artists whose work I didn't know before but who I am now obsessed with: Candice Breitz and Julian Rosefeldt.

Melbourne is well known for its street art, but these days it is hard to find the best quality pieces.  Hosier Lane used to be the centre for artists, with its own curator, but it is now a mess of tagging and tourists.  Small galleries and spaces around the city still provide highlights though - including the nearby Chapter House Lane and Flinders Street Gallery.  I thoroughly recommend taking a walking tour with Bernadette from walk to art to explore all that is new in the Melbourne art scene.

Outside the CBD (Central Business District), I loved the Heide Museum of Modern Art, the beautiful house of art collectors John and Sunday Reed set in wonderful grounds which houses their fascinating collection and an intriguing programme of exhibitions.

William Ricketts Sanctuary is an oddity (understatement) in the glades of Mount Dandenong, about an hour outside the city.  Ricketts was a self-taught and reclusive artist whose respect for nature and the indigenous people of Australia inspired him to create this sculpture park where he lived and worked for decades before his death in 1993.


The Food and Drink Edit

























Melbourne is OBSESSED with coffee.  To a ridiculous level.  For someone who likes coffee but doesn't *love* it, it is hard to understand the complexity with which Melbournites can imbue it.  What I do know, however, is that the city is full to the brim of cafes and coffee shops, from the old school diners to ultra-hip brick wall warehouse spaces.  The best I've found have been outside the CBD: The Foreigner in Ivanhoe, and Auction Rooms in North Melbourne.

Also in Ivanhoe can be found one of the best pizzas I've had outside Italy, at L'Artigiano, a beautiful little local Italian restaurant which is well worth the twenty minute train from the city centre.

Chin Chin serves brilliant thai street food, in a cool warehouse space on Flinders Lane with queues out of the door.  I particularly recommend the 'wok-tossed brown rice w. sweet pork, salted duck egg, basil and crispy school prawns' (yes I did ask for a copy of the menu so I wouldn't forget this dish.  I also bought the cookbook.)  The red duck curry and larb gai were also delicious.  We ordered far too much and I couldn't eat for about three days afterwards.

When I was finally ready to eat again, I found myself wandering past Royal Stacks in the rain (I never said Melbourne was perfect - don't get me started on the weather...).  I was hungry, I fancied a burger, end of story, right?  Well, yes, except that it's worth noting that what I found was my PERFECT BURGER.  The search is finally over.  The perfect patty, the perfect cheese, the perfect bun, the perfect amount of pickle and mustard.  Goddamn it being 10,000 miles from home.  I mean, seriously, goddamn it.

Au Fermier is about an hour outside the city, in the small town of Trentham.  Owned and run by Annie Smithers, it is perfection.  There is no menu, just a set three course lunch/dinner which showcases local produce, as much of it as possible coming from Smithers' own garden.  We ate wonderful pasta with prawns and courgettes (zucchini), delicious lamb with feta and beetroot and a blissfully sweet pavlova with lemon curd and passionfruit.  The room is beautiful, the service is topnotch and the atmosphere relaxed and friendly. I will definitely be back.

For drinks, Melbourne is full of fantastic rooftop bars, of which Madame Brussels is one of the most fun.  Who can resist a jug of cocktails and a huge cheese plate with a view of the city?

Bar Lourinha serves really fantastic tapas and has a great wine list.  Squeeze yourself into the tiny space, grab a seat at the bar and settle in.


The Shopping Edit

























Melbourne is full of fantastic boutiques hidden down laneways, and the only thing that stops me buying ALL OF THE CLOTHES is the fact that it's entirely the wrong season and I am fickle so worry that I will have lost interest in them all by the time they are weather-appropriate in London.  My particular window-shopping favourites are Zimmerman, Sass & Bide and Life with Bird (particularly their outlet store on Brunswick Street in Fitzroy).

Otherwise, I always stock up on Aesop skincare products, Gewurzhaus spices and Kikki K stationery.  And spend a few hours wandering around Gertrude and Smith Streets in Fitzroy, hanging out at Readings bookshop in Carlton, and pottering at the wondrous Queen Victoria Market, which I DREAM of having near me in London.