Home > Your priceless Liverpool events guide > Ben Johnson's Liverpool Cityscape 2008 and the World Panorama Series
A vast painting of Liverpool is on display from 24 May to 2 November 2008 at the Walker Art Gallery. The exhibition, Ben Johnson’s Liverpool Cityscape 2008 and the World Panorama Series, sponsored by the University of Liverpool, will form part of the city’s celebrations as European Capital of Culture.
The monumental painting, by internationally-renowned artist Ben Johnson, has been commissioned by National Museums Liverpool, with the Liverpool Culture Company and Professor Phil Redmond CBE and Mrs Alexis Redmond. The 8ft by 16ft cityscape is the largest and most complex painting ever undertaken by the artist.
When it goes on display The Liverpool Cityscape will be joined by Johnson’s other world cities series of paintings, including panoramas of Zürich, Jerusalem and Hong Kong and paintings representing Chicago and Paris. These are part of an ongoing project started in 1994 and represent the equivalent of 44 years work, as Johnson creates these paintings in a Renaissance-like studio using highly specialist assistants. This will be the first time that these works are exhibited together.
During February and March 2008 over 45,000 people came to see Ben work on the painting at the Walker Art Gallery in specially created studio.
As well as Johnson’s work, the exhibition will include a small selection of historic views of Liverpool, demonstrating the long-standing tradition into which the new cityscape fits.
The Liverpool Cityscape has been three years in the making and takes in Liverpool’s famous skyline from a vantage point high above the River Mersey. It encompasses several thousand individual buildings and has taken Johnson and up to 11 assistants 24,000 person hours to get this far.
The left-hand boundary of the picture will include Chapel Street and Tithebarn Street, reaching back to Everton and, uniquely, visually uniting the city’s two football grounds; the right hand extreme takes in the Albert Dock up to the Anglican Cathedral and will reveal the extent of the Liverpool’s redevelopment as it enters 2008. This view comprises 170 hectares of the city, a near bird’s-eye perspective.
Johnson’s cityscapes involve a painstaking process. In making The Liverpool Cityscape he explored the city taking over 3000 reference photographs, considered alternative viewpoints, consulted with architects and historians, as well as the people of Liverpool, and absorbed the city’s distinctive atmosphere. Thousands of detailed drawings were produced before the execution of the painting in minute detail.
The painting will be a lasting legacy of Liverpool’s European Capital of Culture year and will move to a permanent home in the Museum of Liverpool when it opens in 2010/11.
| Day | Opening Times |
|---|---|
| Monday | 10:00 - 17:00 |
| Tuesday | 10:00 - 17:00 |
| Wednesday | 10:00 - 17:00 |
| Thursday | 10:00 - 17:00 |
| Friday | 10:00 - 17:00 |
| Saturday | 10:00 - 17:00 |
| Sunday | 10:00 - 17:00 |
| Bank Holiday | 10:00 - 17:00 |
* Open daily 10am-5pm. Closed from 2pm on 24 December and all day on 25 and 26 December and 1 January.
The Walker is in Liverpool city centre, close to the entrance to the Queensway Tunnel and Lime Street Station.
The Walker is a short walk from Liverpool Lime Street station - Liverpool's mainline train station.
Ben Johnson's Liverpool Cityscape 2008 and the World Panorama Series
Walker Art Gallery
William Brown Street
Liverpool
L3 8EL
Tel: 0151 478 4199
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