Sunday, 20 February 2022
Dazzle
Sunday, 13 February 2022
A Winter Window
The window of the Rowley Gallery
Get yourself down to the Rowley Gallery to see their current display for the month of February. There is artwork based on the interpretation of the theme of grids. It will be a continually evolving display of the personal definitions and variations of the grid theme by the gallery's stable of artists. Taking pride of place at the forefront of the window for a few days only are four gold leafed pieces of mine (photo above). From left to right there is Prismes created last year and based on the concentric circular geometries of Sonia Delaunay (here). Sospiri, based on the rhythms of breathing and the Breath sculptures of Guiseppe Penone (here). A brand new artwork entitled Dazzle, more on the creation of which in my next post. The last of the quartet is Struktur based on the work of the women weavers of the Bauhaus workshop (here). Lastly but by no means least are smaller pieces - Whisper, and two smaller versions of Struktur. All works have been hand gilded and individually cut by myself. As mentioned earlier the display will change soon to feature the work of other gallery artists so catch my golden quartet while you can. There are more images of all work featured by the other artists on the excellent Rowley Gallery blog which will be updated regularly (here). Contact the Rowley Gallery for information about the availability of artworks or any further enquiries.
Sunday, 6 February 2022
Francis Bacon - Selected Graphics
An exhibition of Francis Bacon prints timed to coincide with the current blockbuster show Francis Bacon: Man and Beast round the corner at the Royal Academy. This exhibition focuses on Bacon's graphic oeuvre. Bacon was biased against the print medium initially. He thought of prints as mere reproductions rather than their techniques as valid art forms in their own right. It wasn't until the proposal to illustrate the text of Surrealist poet René Crevel with his etchings that a change in Bacon's attitude was affected. This show focuses mainly on lithographic reproductions and aquatints of Bacon's more famous paintings and his own idiosyncratic take on the figure and human condition. Looking at the featured prints one can completely understand Bacon's reservations about the print medium. Something is lost in translation. These are just 'mere reproductions' of his more nuanced painted works and possibly created just as a commercial venture. As good as they are as reproductions they lack texture, the surfaces are flat and lifeless in comparison to their painted originals. Anybody having experienced an original Bacon painting will notice the differences. Unlike the print output of artists such as Rembrandt and his magnificent etchings for example, they do not say or add anything new to Bacon's oeuvre. This exhibition however serves as a nice little appetiser for what will be a more substantial main course of original Bacon paintings being served up at the RA when I visit Francis Bacon: Man and Beast.












