BRIGHTON.- Largely overlooked in his lifetime, Bill Lynch was a painter of exceptional power and talent, whose work ranging across time and cultures continues to speak to us about the power of the past in the present moment. Assessing Lynch's work in the New York Times in 2014, critic Roberta Smith wrote Genius lands where genius will, and Im pretty sure some alighted on Bill Lynch.
The exhibition takes place from 6 August to 15 October. The title is a reference to the Greek god of wine, parties, theatre, harvest, madness and ecstasy. As a young man Lynch arrived to study at Cooper Union in New York around 1978. Described by his friend the artist Verne Dawson, he radiated a physical energy that was incandescent
of the Sufi bent intoxication, whirling, playing the fiddle all in the service of connecting with the oneness of spirit and matter. Lynch it seems was a powerful force, but during his time in New York, he lived on the fringes social, passionate, a huge fan of rock n roll and dedicated to his work, but never entirely embraced by the New York art world of the 1970s and 80s. He rarely sold his work and was never represented by any of the burgeoning number of galleries in the city at the time.
Dawson continues, He couldnt have cared less about the minimalist music of Philip Glass or Steve Reich. He consumed and considered pop stars and movies, not the new issue of Artforum.
He might just as easily be found playing rock and roll records at a party, as in a state of revery drawing under a cherry tree in Central Park. Lynch had considerable depth of knowledge in art history linking ancient Chinese painting to contemporaries such as Warhol and Alice Neel who were both significant influences. Lynch painted primarily onto salvaged plywood sheets and other found materials. Partly from financial necessity and partly because of the contributions the grains, knots and marks afforded the work, often leaving areas raw and exposed. He depicted landscapes and wildlife, cultural artefacts and mythical symbols through instinctive and direct brushstrokes with a psychological connection to his subject matter.
The Exile of Dionysus is an exhibition in two parts tracing connections in Lynchs work between his wide-ranging interests spanning ancient cultures, mythology and art history. In the South Gallery, visitors encounter a world of lush vegetation, plants and landscapes interspersed with anthropological images and symbols. The work is heavy with both a sense of decay but also of magic, a visual language that resonates across time and cultures giving a sense of the layering of history, of long forgotten gods and pagan rites. The fertile growth and damp leaves suggesting a society of rich beliefs and celebration still there but only dimly remembered. Lynch himself said The idea is to give a glimpse at another world the land of nods or possibly a more westerly location by close examination of this one
Moving into the North Gallery, there is a collection of works born from Lynchs deep interest in traditional Chinese painting. It is in the apparent simplicity of these works that the artists skill as a draughtsman emerges alongside his mastery of technique; using space and light to suggest form, movement and glimpses of narrative. There are echoes here too of the spirituality articulated in the landscapes of the Ming Dynasty which intrigued Lynch; using the painting as a space for reflection, for contemplating simplicity and form.
Across the exhibition there is a conversation between two spaces, between the spiritual and the earthly, the tension between a past and the current moment. The spirit of Dionysus is an embodiment of these conversations - what might seem like contradictions now - half hidden by Lynchs tangled vegetation, pagan spirits and pools of light but not entirely forgotten.
Bill Lynch was born in Albuquerque, New Mexico. He studied art at Cooper Union, New York where he lived and worked before moving to Mill Valley, California and then Raleigh, North Carolina. In 2014 a retrospective of Lynchs work, curated by Verne Dawson, took place at White Columns, New York. Lynchs estate is represented by the Approach Gallery, London.