relationship between the two, spanning the century from the 1910s to the present day. It brings to life the innovation and originality of photographers over this period, and shows how they responded and contributed to the development of abstraction. Christian Marclay: The Clock 14 September to 20 January 2019 Christian Marclay’s acclaimed installation The Clock 2010 has captivated audiences across the world from New York to Moscow. 24-hours long, the installation is a montage of thousands of film and television images of clocks, edited together so they show the actual time. It is a thrilling journey through cinematic history as well as a functioning timepiece. Following several years of rigorous and painstaking research and production, Marclay collected together excerpts from well-known and lesser-known films including thrillers, westerns and science fiction. Anni Albers 11 October to 27 January 2019 As a female student at the radical Bauhaus art school, Albers was discouraged from taking up certain classes. She enrolled in the weaving workshop and made textiles her key form of expression. She inspired and was inspired by her artist contemporaries, among them her teacher, Paul Klee, and her husband, Josef Albers. Magic Realism: Art in Weimar Germany 1919-33 30 July 2018 to 14 July 2019 Tate Modern will explore German art from between the wars in a year-long, free exhibition. This presentation explores the diverse practices of a number of different artists, including Otto Dix, George Grosz, Albert Birkle and Jeanne Mammen. Although the term‘magic realism’is today commonly associated with the literature of Latin America, it was inherited from the artist and critic Franz Roh who invented it in 1925 to describe a shift from the art of the expressionist era, towards cold veracity and unsettling imagery. LONDON GLASSBLOWING 62 – 66 BERMONDSEY STREET SE1 3UD 020 7403 2800 Breaking the Mould 28 September to 20 October In 2011 London Glassblowing hosted Melt, an important exhibition of cast glass by a dazzling array of artists, for the launch of of the book‘Mould Making for Glass’by the internationally renowned artist Angela Thwaites. The captivating quality of kiln cast glass has meant that it has become an important material for contemporary artists, some of whom who normally work in other media. | C U L T U R E |