Archive for February, 2008

Seamus Heaney

 I had forgotten how good Seamus Heaney was. Then I remembered.

I To-night, a first movement, a pulse,
As if the rain in bogland gathered head
To slip and flood: a bog-burst,
A gash breaking open the ferny bed.
Your back is a firm line of eastern coast
And arms and legs are thrown
Beyond your gradual hills. I caress
The heaving province where our past has grown.
I am the tall kingdom over your shoulder
That you would neither cajole nor ignore.
Conquest is a lie. I grow older
Conceding your half-independant shore
Within whose borders now my legacy
Culminates inexorably.
IIAnd I am still imperially
Male, leaving you with pain,
The rending process in the colony,
The battering ram, the boom burst from within.
The act sprouted an obsinate fifth column
Whose stance is growing unilateral.
His heart beneath your heart is a wardrum
Mustering force. His parasitical
And ignmorant little fists already
Beat at your borders and I know they’re cocked
At me across the water. No treaty
I foresee will salve completely your tracked
And stretchmarked body, the big pain
That leaves you raw, like opened ground, again

Seamus Heaney

Written by Tom

February 11th, 2008 at 5:49 pm

New works

Lad. You know how much I like ‘Melancholy, Utopia and the Roman snail’ but this image provides a good counterpoint to a particular point of discussion. I think the underlying structure and imagery of ‘M,U R M’ is great. But I think it has become heavy and over worked. I am honestly in no way trying to reflect your criticsm of me back at you. Its just that when you see this work its so clear. I am aware that different subjects require different handling and would never wish you to apply this colour range of variety of marks to ‘Melancholy…’ But I owuld like to see the lively and light touch and subtle and confident colour range of this painting. Here you seem to know when its enough, you seem to be working with a greater conviction. I tihnk a lot of it might be to do with a clairty existing from the start and a confidence in the foundation (the literal physically drawn ones and the more abstract ‘ideas’ of what you want). I am in danger of losing my point, but the two newest works, in mere formal analysis, are really strong.

This work in particular seems to have a real british beauty about it. It seems to be less contrived (and I never thought the others were) and seems to just be happening. I don’t know if you will like the comparison but there is a lightness of touch not a million miles from Peyton’s work. They are of course more worked up than that, and demand to be, but there is that ‘quality’ in them.

The colour rnage in this work is fantastic. I have a very exact word in my head to describe it, but cant bloody think what that is. That dark blue sits so vividly agasint the varying colour of the ground and backdrop. There is a mystery and intrique which seems to be central to the subject matter. Its actually really beutiful.

On a final note, we still going ahead with our swap deal on the kiss and Icarus I? Hope so, even though I tihnk I am getting a very good deal. Would be keen to do another one at some point this year. Be nice to do a swap a year, if we are both keen.

Written by Tom

February 11th, 2008 at 5:04 pm

Georg Baselitz at the Royal Academy 2007

 From the 22nd of September to the 9th of December 2007 the Royal Academy held a retrospective of the hugely prolific German painter, Georg Baselitz. A few months after my visit I tohught a quick ‘review’ was in order.  

 The Academy provided a brief synopsis of the show, which it will do no merit to rewrite:

 ”The first major UK retrospective of his work, this exhibition features over 60 paintings, together with a significant number of sculptures, prints and drawings. It provides a unique opportunity to view works produced over the five decades of Baselitz’s career, from his earliest paintings, dealing with his own existential problems within German society in the post-war period, to outstanding examples of his ‘Fracture’ and ‘Upside-Down’ paintings.

The exhibition also includes some of his most recent works, as Baselitz revisits themes explored in his early career, but this time using a newer, more lyrical style.”

Georg Baselitz, Mit roter Fahne (With a Red Flag), 1965.
Georg Baselitz, Mit roter Fahne (With a Red Flag), 1965. Oil on canvas, 162 x 130 cm Private collection, Germany. Photo Frank Oleski.

Baselitz is best known for the inversion of his motifs. By turning them upside down he attempts to liberate them from the confines of their particular subject matter. It is this play with signs and their meanings along with his handling of paint that most interested me. The later of these provides part of what I would call a typically Germanistic tradition of paint handling. I openly admit that such a phrase is often an empty attempt at some kind of extensive knowledge of the various facets of the European paint aesthetic. I don’t. But I do have a gut instinct which says he is central to something specifically German, and I hope that comes from mroe than the fact that I know he is German and I know others have said such a thing. But its impossible to totally remove ourselves from such repetitive critical judgements. So, an honest but potentially empty point.

 

 This upside down falling figure was a recurring motif in the exhibition. It is one of the times his ‘tactic’ works and transcends the self pastiche gimmicry is occasionally veers towards. When you are just inverting image for an attempet at shock, originality or becasue its your trademark then it is an empty gesture. When you are doing it because it is central to a pictures dynamic, then you are doing something worthwhile.

 In this work a figure which might have been solid and stable, standing in space, becomes detached from this. Turned upsdie down it becomes isolted, lost, empty of its orginal context. It becomes a witty and tragic allegrocial motif. When he works like this we do question the nature of imagery, the mechanics of pictorial production and viewing, the manner in which symbols gain and lose meaning. He shows that through a simple act we can destablise a motif from its particular referent and make it become something else. When it works well it becomes an interesting emptying act. WHen it works at its best it is a wistful play between the orginal focus and the new focus, causing a kind of confusion in the viewing. Its this ‘unease’ which he is surely after. This slightly old school anarchic approach to image making.

 Across a whole show, however, there were times that you get bogged down by it. What was a slightly provocative and edgey gesture becomes a kind of party trick. The kind your uncle might play and which you feel you have to keep laughing at and applauding. The problem, in the confines of a galleries snobbism, knowingness and grandeur (which projects a presummed greatness onto the work) we feel like the only one who is fed up with the trick.

 This could all be down to my low attention span, which results in me now being more interested in a potential cup of tea than finishing this article. So take it with a pinch of salt (the comment, not the tea…one sugar with that please)

 When Baselitz is at his best is the paint handling which is central. The germanic tradition, for me, is one in which a kind of arrogant and bullish handling of paint evokes powerful and evocative themes. It feel close to the Spanish tradition, but perhaps without the sexual emotive charge. It feels far less conservative and overly worked and consciously intellectual than the british tradition. It also seems to be less concerned with aesthetic flourishes and overt technical mastery than either the Italian or French tradition. I can’t justify this. But it seems to say, here is this mark, this is what it does and thats enough. I don’t need to justfy it through excess sweat, testosterone or creative twirls.

 

I am in danger of moving towards a dangerously Wofflin type analyse. A belief that the National spirit of a country is capture in the style of the art. I don’t know if I fully by into this kind of historical analysis, but I seem to be moving towards it here. I seem to be suggestive that Baselitz has a typically Germanic pragmatism in his handling, a kind of utalitarian approach to paint. Its a kind of raw, unfused effectiveness. German or not, this is true of his work.

Consider the work above. Postward German children, Nazi symbols and the inexcapable truth of recent German history are takcled head on in many similar works. The subject matter is brazenly open and crude, and the handling of paint does not shy away from this. Its crass, brash and captures a kind of troubling and tangible neurosis of identity, personal and national, in the very application.

 It is interesting that Baselitz himself comments on the inescapability of his and his countries identiy:  

“What I could never escape… was Germany, and being German.”

He provocation was, and to an extent still is, genuinelly shocking. We are bored of sensation now, we have been flooded with it in galleries, the media and the news. Seen cows cut in half and preserved, seen suicide bombers everyday, seen images of a post 9/11 world whilst munching coco pops. We are bored of it, dead to it. Yet it is in the tradition heavy, dull and restrained world of painting which Baselitz manages to court shock with a viscereal intensity.

The reason it hits home, when it works, is that it feels like more than shock for its own sake. For much of 90’s brit art seems to have a hangover from modernism that believes its enoguh to be shocking without reason. We don’t need to be a historian of Baselitz’s socio-historic context to appreciate his provocation comes from an unavoidable need. Its feels like these are demons he has to excavate.Rather than a business stratergy to be noticed by Londons uber cool art clique than motivates so many current artists.

Beyond the repeitive tricks of his work, therefore, lies something far more profound. There lies a wit, a strength and awarenss of how to use and manipulate imagery, an ability to handle paint and court the controversial, all brought together to capture an important and specicifc moment in the human condition. Its the most ghastly of hangovers from one of the darkest passages of European history, and his works seems to be a cathartic and visual equivalent to asprin.  

 Thats it, apologies for the splurge. This lacks coherence or structure, but I needed to get it out of me. Now, wheres that cup of tea. :)

 

Written by Tom

February 11th, 2008 at 4:21 pm

Quote of the day

“Whether Jesus is real or not, he’s had a bigger impact on the world than any of us have. And the same could be said for Bugs Bunny and Superman and Harry Potter.”

The social commentary of Kyle from South Park.

 

 

 

 

Written by Tom

February 11th, 2008 at 10:15 am

Mourning after

The morning after

Were mourning the lose

Were moving faster

Then counting the cost

The ends coming fast

Which word is last

Written by Tom

February 10th, 2008 at 11:46 pm

Posted in Our poems

Callum Innes- Kettles Yard

Callum Innes painting at Kettles Yard.

Process painting can so often be seemingly anti painting, cold and purely formal, with that kind of Greenbergian rigid ideal that restricts association.

Callum Innes’ painting offers up a beautiful alternative. The ‘Monolgue’ series (which were on show at Kettles Yard in 2007) are, on the face of it, nothing more than a painterly experiment, epxloring the process of applinyg and then removing layers of paint which pour down the length of the canvas.

In that process, however, he finds something else. He finds some of the mystery which originally so fascinated him with mythology. They are about ‘being and not being’ to quote the Kettles Yard catalogue. That is, they are just as much about what we see and what we don’t see.

The narration of paint journey down the canvas and the forgotten memroeis of the layers which were removed and the paint which fell off. It simple yet evocative.

When you see then they have a sense of rightness which Greenberg would have enjoyed. Yet this comes not from paint ability to shut itself of from everything else, but from its ability to find within itself a sense of otherness. It is this otherness which Callum Innes paintings at Kettles Yard so eloquently articulate.

Written by Tom

February 10th, 2008 at 11:42 pm

Johnny Greenwood

I am planning to write a review for the score to ‘There will be blood’ soon. I want to wait untill I have fully digested the album and heard it in the context of the film. Before that I want to make a quick point about a quote by Mr. Greenwood in a recent New York times article.

“New music was always a big deal to me…to me it just made sense that I had Pixies records and Messiaen’s ‘Turangalila symphony’. i started thinking of them in the same way really”

 This is surely where we should be at the moment. We have the grand and vast array of ’stuff’ being produced (visually, musically) and we can source and be influenced or just amazed by it all. I think it goes even further, back into history. In 2008 we have access to the cultural products of all that wnet before us. Whilst the context (geographically, philsophically and culturally) has changed the fact remains. We can be looking at a ritual mask from 12th Century Angola or a Frank Stella painting from 1970. As artists we don’t have to overly concern ourselves with the socio-historical context of the work that so obsesses and pollutes historians and writters. Instead we can source these objects for any form of inspiration we want. Starting to realise I potentially sound like a typicaly middle class, male white westerner, happy to basadise and bankrupt other cultures in the puruit of my own aims. I am not sure I buy into this though, so will stick with my initial thoughts, however rambled.

Greenwood is a perfect example of how all these influences can come together to enrichen the process. His ‘Bodysong album’ was great and his compilation of songs released on the ‘Trojan Recrods’ label is fantastic. No wonder he is capable of producing (in the space of a year) a classcial score of such depth and variety, to build strange large expansive sampling machines to stretch the possiblilty of Radiohead’s ‘Kid A’ tendencies and to produce riffs as startling as that near the end of ‘Bodysnatchers’.

Written by Tom

February 10th, 2008 at 11:14 pm

Comments from Ben

Just an upload of some useful comments Ben sent me in an email today… with my response at the bottom… 

…It seems like at the moment you are working hard to resolve a tension between the painterly abstract values which would seem to underpin your pre-cambridge work and the interjection of figurative elements which you have been playing with since your return to paint. It would seem essential to your development to work through this, and the freedom with which you are now working undoubtedly reflects an internal need for experimentation.

Personally I am not convinced the path will be an easy one. I tend to find the combination conceptually troublesome; with the experience of viewing all too often complicated by the two means of reading the work (eg our current show of ***** *****,the photos beneath fight with the meaningless abstract doodles above, rather than being synergenic)..collage and appropriation though would seem to provide an interesting means of working through the desire for external reference whilst preserving a focus on surface…you seem to have discovered this.

In general it seems like you are working in the right direction. Your ritual of a drummer boy seems to transcend the decorative facility of the swimmers and point towards a more evocative style. which incorporates your technical ability as a painter as well as an evocation of emotion. Between Somewhere and Nowhere III and an A-Z of loss I also like. Image and form in E minor and Ritual dance of the drummer boy I also like a lot. I think in these works I see less tension between abstraction and figuration because the two seem to work together. The conceptual ambiguity (or perhaps looseness?) of the swimmers is, for me, more troublesome. In general though your experimentation would seem to be aiming to resolve issues at the core of your purpose…good on ya.

An aside: ***** ****** (our last show) experimented with collage before leading into Hard edge abstraction. I can see a sort of Greenbergian merit in it….

P.s. I’m very much in an abstract painting frame of mind at the moment I think

what dyou reckon??

 ….Some quick thoughts in return…

“I think in these works I see less tension between abstraction and figuration because the two seem to work together”

You have hit the nail on the head here in terms of what I am trying to do. You are also correct about ‘Image and Form in E Minor’, despite being a really quick and early work it does this. I think this is what all painters strive for and what good paintings acheive. I seem to always refer to it as the musical nature ofpaint, when it is able to harmonise the various references of the medium, with the parts working together rather than agasint. Its why I loved Titian, it as if the formal qualities of the paint and the mimetic function work together in order to provide a depth and resonance to the narrative whole. Its what makes them poetic to me. There is absolutely no contradiction between the seperate parts but an utterly necessary interplay.

I think this comes about when the artist has not self consciously seperated the elements in there head and then tried to tie them back together, which I clealry do at points…resulting sloppy and contrived images. In some sense Titian had an advantage, pre abstraction he was able to appreciate the formal qualities of the medium but not have ever seen those be celebrated entirely on their own grounds. Yet equally his explicitally Venetian style looked to find image in the medium, rather than the Vasarin, Central Italian example where mimesis looked to purge any evidence of the artists hand or the mediums existence. For Titian the mimeiss was formed in and created by the paint. The shimmer layers and open strokes giving an illusionisitic vibration which could create a sense of flesh breathing of light shaking. It was in this realisation that he was able to capture a depth and variety of human existnece which i don’t think has ever been surpassed in painting. It is this, surely, which makes him Shakespearian.

I digress… 

In terms of my own work I am trying to refind a point, in terms of the creative process, where my subject allows the technical range of paint to be fully explored, but because the subject demands it. What I don’t want is an image, subject, narrative which exists on one level with a kind of egotistical splattering of painterly masturbation over the top of it.

That said, I do want to openly embrace something Andy mentioned. That is the ability to have numerous styles and ways of making sitting alongside each other. But the key, and maybe its a grey area, is to find it so that these juxtapositions and implosions work together in the interest of the whole score (going back to paitning as music) rather than being a success on their own but a kind of vomitted mess together. I find the potential search for this exciting, its like a balancing act where it can all slip off into chaos or all come together to make total ’sense’.

As a quick connected not to this, I am also attempting at the moment to conscioulsy play a solid (we can call it classical it is ambition) geometric structure agasint an organic (we can call it Romantic if we so wish) play of form, colour and medium over the top. I certain don’t wish to see images as existing entirely on one side of this fance or another, but between the two.

If I can find that point, where things hover between various existences, than I think I am getting close to ticking on a box or two in my head. The worry is that at this stage I talk a grand game but am only literally starting to make some head way visually.

I am writting a bit of an expansive blog at the moment which tries to make sense of my continued search for subject matter. Hopefully this sits together with this kind of discussion about the ways of actually constructing an image.

Christ knows. Anyway, thanks for your input, very interesting. Might see you Friday as I am down in the smoke to see the Peter Doig show, how exciting. (he does all these things I spoke about…I think)

Written by Tom

February 10th, 2008 at 11:03 pm

between here and there

regarding your new image “between here and nowhere V”

thats more like it tom, it really is, i think this is a push forward for you. they’re beginning to look less like hughie o’donoghue pastiche’s and more miscellaneous, more mysterious.  the figure has taken onboard certain traits of matthias weischer, which is a positive thing. and as such because of its emptiness it has become involved in the narrative rather than just standing idly by and being a figure for figurations sake.

i have recently read something on the construction of bacon’s paintings that would really help you.  in all of his mature paintings he followed a very simple tertiary construction- the active figure on a podeum in a flat background space. it is perhaps a system that you can play around with. it is really very simple but allows the psychological intensity of the figure to be undiluted from outside sources.

Written by Andy

February 10th, 2008 at 6:31 pm

Between somewhere and nowhere V

Finished, and I think the best thing I have done. Very interested to see what you think.

Written by Tom

February 10th, 2008 at 5:56 pm

Posted in Our work