At the Slade, she was the one you always paid attention to: she took you seriously and cared deeply about art and the people trying to make it

I think about Phyllida Barlow all the time. I came to London in 2001 to do an MA at the Slade school of art, finishing in 2003, a year before Phyllida did the show at the Baltic Gateshead that finally turned the art world’s head her way and three years before she retired from teaching to ever-increasing fame.

Phyllida’s was the kind of late-onset fairytale fame that truly does spur a grifter on, with its whisper of “it could be me” – but for me, anyway, that’s not why every single new break she got after leaving the Slade was such a thrill. And it wasn’t because I knew her, and had been taught by her. I cheered because she was so special. She knew how to listen and how to really, truly see. And she cared, so very deeply, about art and the people trying to make it.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

London drinkers given caustic soda instead of salt in tequila slammers

Apparent staff error caused injuries to five people at central London bar…

‘Andrew Tate is a symptom, not the problem’: why young men are turning against feminism

Teachers describe a deterioration in behaviour and attitudes that has proved to…

MPs raise concerns over safety measures at their homes and offices

Politicians complain of delays in security assessments and being issued panic alarms…

‘The rules apply to everyone’: Elon Musk appears in court on last day of Tesla trial

Contrasting portraits emerge in the closing arguments of class-action lawsuit against Musk…