A long-fourth dimension showcase for opera productions, Glyndebourne is at present in a three-year collaboration with the White Cube gallery to add together a flavour-long showing of fine art, launching with work by Georg Baselitz, in an on-site pop-up gallery designed past Carmody Groarke. Cate St Hill reports

Blueprint

Dozens of pairs of legs and feet, all in coquettish stilettos, spin as if dancing the can-can. They're the latest serial of paintings by provocative German artist Georg Baselitz for White Cube, installed in a new temporary pavilion designed by Carmody Groarke in the leafy grounds of Glyndebourne.

There'due south something distinctly theatrical, if a little risqué, most them placed in this most bucolic of settings, with the gently rolling hills and bleating sheep in the near distance.

At first it might seem similar an odd pairing, a contemporary art gallery and great opera house on the site of a historic English country estate - indeed, the smart, black-tied guests might go a picayune fleck of a shock when they realise the paintings explicitly reference swastikas - but Glyndebourne is trying to attract an edgier crowd.

Although information technology has never had a formal gallery space before, Glyndebourne has a long history of the visual arts. David Hockney designed the set for a product of The Rake'south Progress in 1975, Henry Moore's Draped Reclining Woman was lent from the Tate for the gardens for 25 years in 1995, and Julian Opie, Fiona Rae, Grayson Perry and Anish Kapoor have all produced artwork for the programme book.

The gallery space is tight at 10m x 8m. Photo Credit: Luke Hayes
The gallery space is tight at 10m ten 8m. Photo Credit: Luke Hayes

There's also an artists-in-residence programme, started in 2010, which invites selected local artists to create pieces including sculptures and sketches inspired past activity on the estate.

The collaboration with White Cube volition run over three years, Carmody Groarke's pop-upwards gallery infinite being dismantled and built again each festival season, with Baselitz existence the countdown exhibition. Baselitz, now 77, made the series of 14 paintings, halfway between abstraction and figuration, especially for Glyndebourne (non all tin exist shown in the gallery). Each piece, enclosed in a golden frame, is named after music, referencing Bach, Mozart and Wagner as well as hurdy-gurdy and folk music.

'We didn't want it to be a simple illustration of Glyndebourne's plan, that would accept just been a one-liner. Nosotros wanted to brand it a bit more than challenging for the company,' says exhibition curator Andrea Schlieker. 'This is a very lighthearted, frivolous series - information technology's very playful; you can see windmills, turntables, the hands of clocks. The whole notion of velocity and movement is very important. Baselitz paints his canvases very fast on the floor, using brushes and sticks, and sometimes his fingers.'

Carmody Groarke's pavilion is similar in construction to its pavilions for the 2011 Frieze Art Fair. Photo Credit: Luke Hayes
Carmody Groarke'southward pavilion is similar in construction to its pavilions for the 2011 Frieze Art Fair. Photo Credit: Luke Hayes

The pavilion, positioned on a former picnic area, sits to the due south-due east of Michael Hopkins' one,200-seat auditorium (built in 1994), looking on to the estate's gardens and lake. Its design is relatively uncomplicated - a wooden shed-like box with a sloping roof. Made of plywood and clad in translucent plastic, it is similar in construction to Carmody Groarke'due south temporary pavilions for Frieze Fine art Fair in 2011.

Inside, the tight 10m x 8m gallery space is bordered on 3 sides by balconies that provide a buffer between the edifice and the landscape surrounding it. 'We had lots of debates about whether the pavilion should be literally a white cube. In the end we came upwards with the idea that information technology should be a building within a building, so at that place was not an abrupt inside/outside boundary,' says Andy Groarke of Carmody Groarke.

From the opening exhibition Georg Baselitz's Fire! A Song (Feuer! Ein Lied) 2015. Photo Credit: Jochen Littkemann Courtesy of White Cube
From the opening exhibition Georg Baselitz's Fire! A Song (Feuer! Ein Lied) 2015. Photo Credit: Jochen Littkemann Courtesy of White Cube

'We wanted to attract adventure encounters into the gallery and the pavilion to still be function of the promenade effectually the gardens.'

Inside the pavilion you could about be in any white-walled gallery, but in those not-quite-inside/ not-quite-outside spaces, visitors are afforded a wonderful, elevated view over the lake. And that's why you go to Glyndebourne, for the setting.