Apollo Magazine

Caroline Walker: Windows

The Scottish artist’s first solo museum show features some 20 of her candid depictions of women at home and at work

Elaine and Elaine (2020), Caroline Walker.

Elaine and Elaine (2020; detail), Caroline Walker. Photo: Peter Mallet Photography. Courtesy the artist and Grimm Amsterdam, New York; © Caroline Walker

Women who appear to be captured unawares, often through a window or at a distance, are the subject of some twenty canvases by the Scottish painter Caroline Walker in this exhibition at KM21 in The Hague – the artist’s first solo outing in a museum (28 August–28 November). The earliest works on view are from 2016, when Walker shifted approach from her earlier, more openly staged paintings to these candid scenes of daily life. Also included in the show is Measuring, a painting from 2019 of a tailor on Savile Row, which was recently acquired by the museum. Find out more from the KM21’s website.

Preview below | View Apollo’s Art Diary here

Joy, 10:30am, Hackney (2019), Caroline Walker. Photo: Peter Mallet Photography. Courtesy the artist and Grimm Amsterdam, New York; © Caroline Walker

Corner Cuts (2019), Caroline Walker. Photo: Peter Mallet Photography. Courtesy the artist and Grimm Amsterdam, New York; © Caroline Walker

Vanity Room 425 (2018), Caroline Walker. Photo: Peter Mallet Photography. Courtesy the artist and Grimm Amsterdam, New York; © Caroline Walker

Elaine and Elaine (2020), Caroline Walker. Photo: Peter Mallet Photography. Courtesy the artist and Grimm Amsterdam, New York; © Caroline Walker

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