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Amie Siegel discusses her new video work Bloodlines, currently on display at Thomas Dane
Gallery and the Scottish National Museum Gallery of Modern Art, with Adrian Searle, chief art critic for The Guardian.
Siegel has long been interested in the lives of artworks and objects – how they gain cultural meaning and value. Bloodlines follows the movement of paintings by the English artist George Stubbs (1724 – 1806), from their aristocratic homes to their exhibition in a public art gallery, and subsequent return, thus rendering visible complex networks of art, pedigree and cultural identification.
Filmed in numerous private country estates and public institutions across the UK, Bloodlines offers an intimate look into the world of cultural property, the ownership of heritage and distinctions between private and public realms. One of Siegel’s most ambitious works to date, Bloodlines exemplifies the artist’s understated mastery of form, revealing systems of class and inherited wealth, while subtly suggesting colonialism’s role in establishing and perpetuating these structures.
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£10 Full, £7.50 Concessions, £5 Green/Blue Members
Duration: 45 min. talk with Q&A
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no. 236848.