Sunday, 30 May 2021

Victor Pasmore: Line & Space

 
Victor Pasmore - Untitled, 1993
 
 
Yet another exhibition of abstract art in a few that I have encountered in my rounds of the galleries of late. This most recent though was by one of Britain's pioneers of modernism in art - Victor Pasmore. They are lovely exercises in colour, line and form, in which Pasmore creates his own highly personal, ideosyncratic visual language, as distinctive and instantly recognisable as that of Miro, or Picasso. The exhibition includes examples of Pasmore's painted constructions which I wasn't familiar with but really enjoyed. The addition of sculptural wooden shapes to the two dimensional painted picture plane made for a particularly dynamic fusion. I noticed that Pasmore worked with a very limited colour palette in the works featured here. Greens, blues and browns featured prominently, punctuated by black hieroglyph-style linear squiggles in his abstract paintings. What a shock it was to go into the back room of the upstairs galleries and to encounter Pasmore's representational figurative paintings from the early part of his career. They were a total contrast and real revelation. I thought they were so tender. The paint is so delicately, skillfully, and sensitively handled, especially in the portrait of his wife combing her hair. Further research is required on my behalf to understand more about Pasmore's processes, and why he chose to enact such a radical change in his way of working.

 

 
Installation View

 
Linear Composition , 1962-65
 
Abstract in White, Black and Maroon, 1962


Points of Contact, Green Development, 1966

Green Development in Two Movements, 1989

Square Image, 1971

 
Voice of the Ocean, 1989
 
 
Black Rhythm, 1976-77

Brown Symphony, 1979

The Milky Way, 1987

 
The Milky Way, 1987 (details)
 

Blue Development, 1965
 
Abstract in White, Black, Brown and Ochre, 1950
 
Untitled, c.1996
 
Untitled, 1996
 
Portrait Sketch: Florence Head, 1935
 
Girl with a Hand Mirror, 1938
 
Girl Combing Her Hair (The Artist's Wife) c.1940
 
Lily, 1941
 


Victor Pasmore: Line & Space
until 4th June
Marlborough
6 Albemarle Street
London
W1

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