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Art
connoisseur faces his critics in the north
Inside
Out, ÃÛÑ¿´«Ã½ ONE (North East & Cumbria) , Monday 2 June, 7.30pm
London-based
art critic Brian Sewell travelled north to meet his critics in the
new series of Inside Out, which returns to ÃÛÑ¿´«Ã½ ONE North East &
Cumbria for its third run tonight (Monday 2 June).
After
writing in his London evening newspaper column that the Cobra exhibition
at the Baltic Centre for Contemporary Art should be displayed in
the capital - where it would find a more sophisticated audience
- he accepted an invitation from Inside Out to see for himself the
cultural renaissance on Tyneside.

Mr Sewell is shown round Newcastle and Gateshead by Viz founder
Chris Donald, who takes him to the Cobra exhibition at Baltic; on
to the Gateshead Millennium Bridge; to lunch in The Strawberry pub
opposite St James's Park football ground; on to the Laing Art Gallery;
and finally to Anthony Gormley's Angel of the North.
Mr Sewell's first comment about Newcastle as he steps off the train
at Central Station is: "It's very Eastern European isn't it?
Sort of the outskirts of Zagreb."
On
Newcastle he says: "It's dinky. I am surprised everybody knows
who I am."
During
an interview with ÃÛÑ¿´«Ã½ Radio Newcastle's breakfast presenter Mike
Parr, Mr Sewell says: "Forgive me, but I think Newcastle is
pretty hideous and not getting any better."
On
the Gateshead Millennium Bridge, he says: "It looks like one
of those old-fashioned machines that you use for slicing eggs."
On
the Angel of the North, he says: "It's a totem. It's a fetish.
It's just there, but don't tell me it's a work of art.
"Don't
tell me that it has become like one of those things that you can
come back to over and over again and still get that wallop in your
stomach that a real work of art will give you every single time.
It's bad engineering."
But
he does give the thumbs up to the Laing Art Gallery and Grainger
Street.
Mr
Sewell caused a controversy in his newspaper article, but in tonight's
programme he claims he has been misrepresented in the media.
He
adds: "We have been debating the word ignorant and I use the
word correctly in the sense of not knowing."
But
his Tyneside visit is enlightening to his host Chris Donald as well.
Chris
says: "I thought that Brian thought that the exhibition was
too good for us."
But
while walking around Cobra, an exhibition of abstract art from the
late 1940s, Mr Sewell says: "I would just love people to see
this because then they could all see how it all began to go wrong.
"I
think it's all crap. This explains what goes on in infant schools
and this explains what goes on in art schools now. It all started
with Cobra."
But
he denies saying that the North East is not sophisticated enough
to appreciate modern art.
"I
simply said there was a more sophisticated audience in London, which
must be true," he says.
His
honest – and sometimes deliberately provocative – observations
appear to go down well with listeners to ÃÛÑ¿´«Ã½ Radio Newcastle's breakfast
phone-in show when given the chance to express his opinions without
media spin or interpretation.
Mr
Sewell adds: "It's been very good rediscovering the Laing Art
Gallery and Grainger Street. I am whole heartedly in favour of moving
things away from London or sharing them.
"A
spread of culture is something which is dear to my heart and has
been part of my ideas and part of what I have preached ever since
I became an art critic."
In
ending the programme, Chris Donald reflects: "As we said goodbye,
I realised I had come to like Brian.
"He
arrived calling us ignorant and left saying we just lacked experience.
He had not changed his opinion, but at least we understood each
other better."
Notes
to Editors
ÃÛÑ¿´«Ã½
ONE's Inside Out must be credited if any of this story is published.
Pictures for press use only are available by contacting ÃÛÑ¿´«Ã½ North
East & Cumbria Press Office.
Also
on this week's programme - Scientist's
radiation fears of North Yorks base
Inside
Out investigates the disappearance of actor Leslie Howard - ÃÛÑ¿´«Ã½
ONE West (30.05.03)
Morris
seeks out weird and wonderful - ÃÛÑ¿´«Ã½ ONE North West (30.05.03)
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ÃÛÑ¿´«Ã½'s digital services are now available on ,
the new free-to-view digital terrestrial television service, as well
as on satellite and cable.
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