
Bob Dylan, 83, turns his hand back to art as he is set to showcase 97 'emotional' paintings at new exhibition
Bob Dylan is turning his hand from music to painting once again as he is set to showcase an impressive 97 pieces of art at an upcoming exhibition.
The Nobel Prize for Literature winner, 83, will bring his original works - featuring many interesting characters, objects and scenarios - to the Halcyon Gallery at 148 New Bond Street.
His solo show Point Blank - which captures couples, sportsmen, and people playing instruments among other creations - is based on original sketches created between 2021 and 2022.
The drawings were then painted over with colours to create 'living, breathing entities that have emotional resonance, colours used as weapons and mood setters, a means of storytelling', according to Dylan.
'The idea was not only to observe the human condition, but to throw myself into it with great urgency,' he said.
The drawings show a mirror which displays a set of lips, a saxophonist looking introspectively at his instrument and a cowboy whose pistol hangs on his belt in front of a rising sun.
Point Blank will feature 97 new and unseen original paintings by global sensation Dylan (Halcyon/PA)
Some of the drawings have been reworked as blue, red and neutral monochromatic studies, which may hark back to Pablo Picasso's early Blue Period.
The Point Blank series started as a book of 'quick studies' that also includes accompanying prose.
Kate Brown, creative director at Halcyon, said: 'These works on paper feel like memories, intangible windows into the life and imagination of one of the greatest storytellers who ever lived.
'People who attend the exhibition will discover that they provoke stories from our imagination. We consider the circumstances of the protagonists and ponder our movement through the spaces that the artist depicts.'
Dylan previously had an exhibition at a Halcyon Gallery for his Drawn Blank Series, featuring graphite drawings he made while he was travelling between Europe and the Americas from 1989 to 1992 and later reworked with paint.
He has said his works are a way to 'relax and refocus a restless mind' amid busy touring schedules.
Paul Green, president and founder of Halcyon, said: 'It is nearly 18 years since Halcyon first started working with Bob Dylan and it has been an extraordinary experience to watch this cultural icon develop into such a critically revered and important visual artist so closely.
'This latest body of paintings feels like a more intimate connection to the artist than in any of his previous work and it is a great privilege to share them with the public for the first time.'
Last year, a rare painting by the folk music legend went up for auction after he created the piece during his Woodstock years, around 1968, according to RR Auction.
Another painting from the era by Dylan, 82, recently sold for $100,000 at auction after he gifted it to his late manager Albert Grossman.
Dylan, who has won 10 Grammys and been nominated 38 times, is one of the most acclaimed songwriters, and was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1988.
His songs have been recorded more than 6,000 times, with artists as varied as The Byrds, Jimi Hendrix and Adele finding both commercial and critical success with covers.
Dylan began his career in 1962 with the single Mixed-Up Confusion, which failed to chart in the UK or the US – before hitting stardom with a string of singles in 1965, including The Times They Are A-Changin', Subterranean Homesick Blues and Like A Rolling Stone.
This period of his newfound fame was recently covered in 2024 biopic A Complete Unknown starring Timothee Chalamet as the influential folk singer.
It follows Dylan's early days in the 1960s, culminating in his controversial performance at the 1965 Newport Folk Festival, after he had gone electric, and was nominated for eight Oscars and six Baftas.
The free exhibition Bob Dylan: Point Blank will open at 148 New Bond Street on May 9.
Timothée Chalamet embodied Dylan as he took on the leading role of the esteemed musician in the biopic A Complete Unknown.
Based on Elijah Wald's 2015 book Dylan Goes Electric!, the movie follows Dylan as a 19-year-old arriving in 1961 New York City.
Shedding light on his relationship with his hero Woody Guthrie (Scoot McNairy) and other folk music legends, A Complete Unknown charts his rise to fame and the controversy around his musical shift.
The film also stars Monica Barbaro as Joan Baez, Elle Fanning as Sylvie Russo, Edward Norton as Pete Seeger and Boyd Holbrook as Johnny Cash.
Timothée was cast as Dylan back in 2020, when it was announced that James Mangold would direct Jay Cocks' script, which he re-wrote.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


BBC News
a day ago
- BBC News
Powderham Castle's attic 'treasures' make £540k at auction
Unusual "treasures" from a Devon castle's attic have been sold at auction for more than half a million Earl of Devon detailed some of the items discovered at Powderham Castle, which were auctioned on Tuesday, including canon and some pieces from Charlie Courtenay said: "We had a famous uncle who was the commander of the Royal Welch Fusiliers in about 1900, [he] went off to Peking during the Boxer Rebellion and managed to bring back a bunch of treasures from China including the carrying poles of the sedan chair of the last emperor of China." The chair poles were expected to receive between £8,000 and £12,000 at auction but achieved £40,000, auctioneers Dreweatts said. Lord Courtenay said the process of deciding what would stay and what would be auctioned had been "really fun".He said it was "giving old objects new life". "These things will be really interesting and will be an absolute star of the show in their home, whereas at Powderham they've been sitting sort of undisturbed in an attic for 60 or 70 years." Of the sedan chair poles, Lord Courtenay said: "We figured it's probably about time that they returned either to China or to some Chinese enthusiast rather than being hidden away in the corner of a castle in Devon."He added: "There are so many things squirreled away in the castle attics and in the tops of the towers. There are a few real treasures."He said items that would not be auctioned included a crusading coin of Jocelyn de Courtenay, which was found in a picture frame, and a banyan silk dressing gown that had belonged to the third viscount. The auction on Tuesday achieved a total of £540,890, which will go towards restoring parts of the castle."We reroofed the castle during the pandemic, built the new welcome centre but there's a whole bunch of rooms that sort of require refreshing," Lord Courtenay added the upstairs library "got quite damaged a couple of years ago but [we] managed to do the major repairs and now we need to do the interiors."It's jobs like that, where you are sort of restoring heritage. And you know if we raise sufficient funds we'll be able to put some of those projects in place."


Daily Mail
a day ago
- Daily Mail
George Orwell estate accused of censorship after putting trigger warning at start of Nineteen Eighty-Four
George Orwell's estate has been accused of censorship after a 'trigger warning' was added to his classic novel Nineteen Eighty Four. The preface of the the 75th anniversary edition suggests Orwell's protagonist Winston Smith is 'problematic' and that readers may find his views on women 'despicable'. The introductory essay was written by US novelist Dolen Perkins-Valdez and critics claim it risks undermining the revolutionary novel's warning against state control of thought. Orwell's dystopian hyperbolic future is set under an authoritarian regime, where citizens are punished by the 'Thought Police' for subversive thoughts. It follows Winston Smith and a minor bureaucrat who secretly rebels against the regime with Julia, a fellow party member. But their doomed affair comes to an end and the hearts of readers are broken when they are arrested, tortured and brainwashed into betraying one another. The novel has been hailed as one of the most influential pieces of literature of all time. Now, the author's estate has been accused of ideological policing. US writer Walter Kirn said on the podcast America this Week: 'We're getting someone to actually convict George Orwell himself of thought crime. 'We're not yet in a world where books and classic books are being excised or eliminated,' Kirn added, but warned the Orwell estate-approved edition of 1984 had been 'published with an apology for itself'. The book already had a foreword written by American novelist Thomas Pynchon, leading Mr Kirn to question why a second was needed. 'These people felt they needed an introduction before the old white man's introduction. So this version of 1984 has a trigger warning!' He called it 'the most 1984-ish thing I've ever f***ing read'. Ms Perkins-Valdez wrote she was enjoying the novel until Winston revelas himself to be a 'problematic' character who 'disliked nearly all women, and especially the young and pretty ones.' She added the novel doesn't address race and as a black woman she found it difficult to connect with the characters. The anniversary edition of the 1949 classic is published by Berkley Books, an imprint of Penguin Random House.


Daily Mail
2 days ago
- Daily Mail
Actress Helen Lederer needed a loan when the tax was due for her Celebrity Big Brother stint
Stand-up comedian, writer and actress Helen Lederer, 70, has enjoyed roles in TV shows such Girls On Top and Absolutely Fabulous. In 2015 her comic novel Losing It was nominated for the P. G. Wodehouse Comedy Literary Award, while in 2018 she launched Comedy Women In Print to recognise witty women writers, both published and unpublished. Since 2004 she's been married to GP Chris Browne and they live in south-east London. She has a daughter, Hannah, 35, from her first marriage to former Observer newspaper editor, Roger Alton. Her memoir, Not That I'm Bitter, is now out in paperback. Here she tells Richard Barber about her weakness for black coats, her gratitude to dishwasher tablets and why she won't buy any more gadgets. What did your parents teach you about money? My older sister, Janet, and I were given pocket money when we were young but, when we reached our teens we each got a monthly clothes allowance of 10 shillings. I was particularly keen on small pretend Pan Am shoulder bags and Mary Quant tights. I also ran errands and washed the car for half-a-crown. Have you ever struggled to make ends meet? I've never been in a position when I didn't have a roof over my head. My mother, Jeanne, worked at the Board of Trade but gave it up when she got married – you had to in those days – and my father, Peter, was a civil engineer, born in Czechoslovakia but raised in England from the beginning of the war. He died suddenly of a heart attack at 52, but my mother would never have seen me in the gutter. I've borrowed money in my time, and sold things. The life of a freelance is always rather chancy, but I've never had to sleep outside Debenhams under canvas. Have you ever been paid silly money? In 1995 I was offered £70,000 to star in a TV advert for Finish dishwasher tablets. It was a job that took a day and a half – one day to say my lines, then a half-day to show my hand inserting the tablets. This was 30 years ago, so it was an astonishing amount to be paid. What was the best year of your financial life? Well, 1995 was pretty good and 2017 wasn't too bad – I was invited into the Celebrity Big Brother house for which I was paid a six-figure sum. I spent some of it on a set of wicker garden furniture on Chelsea's King's Road. The trouble was I got through all the money and had to take out a loan the following year to pay my tax bill. The most expensive thing you bought for fun? Those days are well gone but I did buy a posh coat from DKNY in Bond Street with the money from the TV ad. I still wear it. I also bought a Max Mara black coat, stupidly similar to the DKNY one. All my clothes are black. What has been your biggest money mistake? So many. There was a stage when retail therapy and anxiety were somehow bound up together. For a long time I thought that if I bought something nice it would make me feel better. But it never did. I have a weakness for gadgets, which is stupid because I can never make them work. I once bought an expensive juicer which involved preparation and chopping and then having to get rid of all the gunge afterwards. I more or less fell at the first hurdle. Best money decision you have made? Using the small legacy my father left me when I was 21, which I put towards a flat in Finsbury Park [in North London]. It was modest but got my foot on the bottom rung of the property ladder. What property do you now own? A house in south-east London which I bought with my husband on equity release and which is far too large for just the two of us. My mother died three weeks before I married for a second time in 2004. The combination of her legacy, the sale of the house I then owned and Chris's house made it all possible. If you can use your property to manage the vagaries of infrequent fees, why not let it work for you? Will you pass your money down or spend it all? Chris and I intend pooling our money and dividing it between his children and my daughter Hannah. Do you have a pension? Yes, a modest one set up for me by an accountant when I was earning pretty well in the 80s and 90s and from which I derive a little money each month. If you were Chancellor what would you do? Exactly what seems to be happening – a rethink on the removal of the winter fuel allowance. It hit one of the most vulnerable sectors of society and didn't raise a huge amount of money. No one thinks less of you for changing your mind, and there must be other ways of raising income. Like taxing the wealthy a little more stringently, for example. What is your number one financial priority? I'm certainly no businesswoman so I can't say I ever think about a financial priority. I like being able to buy a round – I hate meanness. But writing my memoir is the best thing I've ever done: it sold well and gave me a kind of confidence. It's earned back my advance – now the jury is out to see what royalties might come my way. In the meantime, I'm looking forward to three months' solid work – and regular wages – in Fawlty Towers.