NEW YORK, NY.- Flowers Gallery is presenting a solo exhibition of paintings by British artist George Blacklock. Over several decades, Blacklocks works have been concerned with a balance of figuration and abstraction, responding to the body in both their subject matter and their methods of construction. His paintings reflect a sensitive response to phenomena in the surrounding world, from atmosphere and color to sound and music.
The paintings in the current exhibition represent Blacklocks pursuit of what he has termed the beauty of release; the joy of a kind of imagined freedom
of who you are behind closed doors. Blacklock compares his vigorous and intuitive working process to the acts of dancing or singing, a kinesthetic approach to painting where innate bodily knowledge is glimpsed through the act of making. The curvilinear shapes created by the sweep of the artists brush or metal scraper across the surface of the canvas provide a record of the figure in movement, arranging the pictorial space of the painting in accordance with the physical gestures of the body.
Returning to abstraction in the early 1990s after a period of figurative painting, Blacklock remained committed to the traditional narrative structures of Western figurative art, sustaining what he has described as a conversational exchange with the ancestral voices of art history. Often deriving new distilled configurations from pre-existing compositions (such as that of Michelangelos Pieta sculptures), he developed a distinct lexicon of gestural motifs as way of maintaining a dialogue with the art of the past. Several compositions and motifs reoccur throughout the exhibition, such as a stacked, tapering cylindrical form; or twinned shapes that seem to remain separate or self-contained within their shared space. Blacklocks long-standing interest in the reiteration of form is grounded in the belief that repeated forms are never the same, taking on a nuanced, altered quality like an echo. The echo is referred to in the titles of several works, alongside references to mirroring and memory, suggesting an interest in the double that relates to notions of history. Blacklock has said: Echoes are all that remain of real experience.
Relationships to music or sound are located within both the rhythmic structure and in the titles of several works in the exhibition. Blacklock relates the painting Birdsong at Dusk to an encounter with the sound of a nightingales song in an urban landscape reminding him also of the sound of birdsong within the opening movement of Duke Ellingtons The Queens Suite.
Focused on a continued quest for discovery, rather than formal attempts at resolution, each canvas is the result of numerous adjustments, additions and sometimes total reconfigurations, the evidence of which can be seen in the haptic surface energy of his paintings. In Line Through Chaos, created over the period of 2003-17, the tension between the curling diagonal form cutting across the canvas and the chaotic atmospheric space beyond, reflects Blacklocks interest in disturbing the sense of order in his paintings to reveal something formerly unseen. He says: De Koonings concept of slipping glimpses is very important to me as a painter. It is the painters lot to cover up something really interesting with some dumb idea and only glimpsing the former, in the act of the latter. You then have to find it again. With luck the re-finding of that idea leads on to a better idea.