The 'Knockin' on Heaven's Door' hitmaker will showcase
his new creations starting from August 24 this year to January next year.
A collection of portraits by internationally acclaimed
music icon Bob Dylan is scheduled to be showcased at National Portrait Gallery
in London. A total of 12 pastel sketches inspired by real and fictitious
characters constructed from the musician's imagination and memories will be
displayed later this month.
The Gallery's director Sandy Nairne says, "Bob Dylan
is one of the most influential cultural figures of our time. He has always
created a highly visual world either with his words or music, or in paints and
pastels. I am delighted that we can now share these 12 sketches which were made
for display at the National Portrait Gallery."
He has been painting since the late 1960s, but only
started exhibiting his artworks in 2007. "I've done sketching most of my
life. In notebooks, on napkins, on rough paper or cardboard, plates and coffee
pots ... basically when there's something to look at," he once said.
Dylan, whose real name is Robert Allen Zimmerman,
previously displayed his works at the Kunstsammlungen Chemnitz in Germany, at
the Halcyon Gallery in London and at the the Gagosian Gallery in New York.
Art historian John Elderfield described his paintings as
"products of the same extraordinary, inventive imagination, the same mind
and eye, by the same story-telling artist, for whom showing and telling - the
temporal and the spatial, the verbal and the visual - are not easily
separated." Music-wise, Dylan, now 72, receives highly complementary for
his works. He has sold over 500 songs, 46 albums and an astonishing 110 million
records worldwide, and received multiple Grammys, an Oscar and a Golden Globe
among other prestigious awards.
Dubbed "Bob Dylan: Face Value", the upcoming
exhibition will take place from August 24, 2013 to 5 January, 2014.
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