'Portraits' a compilation of represented and guest artists dating to 1907 now on view at Offer Waterman

The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Saturday, April 20, 2024


'Portraits' a compilation of represented and guest artists dating to 1907 now on view at Offer Waterman
David Dawson, b.1960, David Hockney; Lucian Freud, 2003. C-type colour print, 10 1/2 x 15 1/2 inches, 26.7 x 39.4 cm. 2/50. Photo courtesy of Offer Waterman.



LONDON.- The exhibition 'Portraits' on view since June 1st at Offer Waterman, and continuing until the end of the month, brings together modern portraits from the gallery’s inventory, with newer works by represented artists and guest artists who are showing with us for the first time. The portraits date from 1907 to the present and encompass photography, printmaking, drawing, collage, painting and ceramics. While each work has been selected for its individual qualities, when brought together certain emotional themes and conceptual strategies emerge, connecting images made in different times and places.

In several pictures the subject is a close relative of the artist. This is unsurprising given that family members are often near at hand and have become tolerant of modelling for their loved ones. We have David Hockney’s affectionate 1972 ink drawing of his father in a bow tie and a more melancholy, yet vividly coloured photo-collage of his mother asleep, made ten years later. Lucian Freud’s daughter Ib has explained how sitting for a picture was the only way she and her siblings got to spend any time with their father, a fact which, once known, adds a feeling of pathos to her portrait; while Tarka Kings’ romantic drawing of her teenage son on a train, commemorates his passage into adulthood.

Other portraits are set in the more professional space of the artist’s studio where paid models might expect to endure increased levels of discomfort. Freud’s etching Man Resting (State II), 1988 shows his model crashed out, face crumpled under the weight of a heavy head. Photos of Freud and Bacon’s studios maintain the mythology of the studio as a heroic space, where paint is wrestled into submission by masterful (male) artists, and yet both artist’s look uncertain and even physically unsteady when the camera is turned on them.

Several of the photographers included here take an experimental approach to the medium. The low angle from which Brandt photographs his nude on a beach, follows an established thread of abstraction in modern photography, but Brandt’s British backdrops offer a more grungy realism than early modernist images originating in Paris and New York. In Hockney’s photo-collages dating from 1982-3 he discovered a new photographic language, analogous to Cubist painting. While Richard Learoyd’s life sized Polaroid print Olya in Yellow, Two, 2010, combines an exceptional level of verisimilitude (as if one might reach into the picture and touch the figure) with a composition indebted to history painting.

The portraits present a range of strong personalities - willing models who have their own need to be seen and heard. The two earliest works in the show are of spirited modern women, both artists, Mary McEvoy (1877-1927) and Iris Tree (1897-1968) one of the first women in London to chop her hair into a bob. The realistic modelling of Augustus John’s 1907 pencil drawing of McEvoy declares her as an equal to the artist, independent of family or husband, although her biography reveals that she gave up her own art for the duration of her marriage.

The process of drawing is foregrounded in many of these portraits. There are many ways to make a drawing and several pictures suggest an intense level of observation and recording. Gallery artist Kings builds up her images using a range of intricate marks. Her unfinished portrait of Lily echoes the delicate coloured pencil in Hockney’s portrait of Mo and the obsessive cross-hatching in Freud’s etchings. John’s beautifully observed drawing of McEvoy is mirrored a century later in Diarmuid Kelley’s portraits, which are always made from life and where a flash of orange, or patch of lilac paint, perfectly captures an ear or eyelid.

Collage and collage processes are a natural vehicle for expressing ideas of duality and fragmentation. Rose Finn-Kelcey’s trick photo, and Perry’s densely decorated pot, each present two images of the artist within one work. By questioning the notion of a coherent self, they raise further questions regarding gender and sexuality, positioning their multiple identities as a strength. In Stezaker and Moretti’s traditionally made collages surreal juxtapositions also disturb the surface of things. Stezaker’s Mask series - where postcards of landscapes are placed over the faces of film stars - suggest the unfathomable forces nature, while Moretti’s collages which splice together gay pin ups and paintings by Picasso are part homage and part critique of the artist’s aggressively heteronormative masculinity.

This event is part of a series of exhibitions across London to celebrate the reopening of the National Portrait Gallery on 22 June 2023.

With thanks to Andree Cooke, Simon Moretti and Tom Rowland.










Today's News

June 7, 2023

Put a bird on it? Ancient Egypt was way ahead of us.

The Roy Lichtenstein Foundation donates 186 artworks and objects to museums to honor his Centenary

The Paul Jarosz Collection of model trains goes up for bid at Turner Auctions + Appraisals

Hajime Sorayama now being represented by Almine Rech, Paris Matignon

Dr. Stephanie Knappe promoted receives promotion at Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art

'Portraits' a compilation of represented and guest artists dating to 1907 now on view at Offer Waterman

Robert W. Lovelace appointed next Chair of The J. Paul Getty Trust

Quinn's Fine & Decorative Arts auction offers artworks, modernist prints, furniture and sports cars

The Stiftung Arp e.V. gifts over 200 plasters by Sculptor Hans Arp to 10 museums worldwide

Graham Collins: 'Dog Walker's Manifesto' is now presenting at Sean Horton

Maison Hannon, Art Nouveau House-Museum, now open to the public

'Catherine Goodman: Do You Remember Me?' opens at The Coach House Gallery at Waddesdon

Peabody Essex Museum appoints Sue Kim as Chief Philanthropy Officer

Annet Gelink Gallery has opened the exhibition 'I'M AT 4%' by Ryan Gander

'Purple Prose: Queer Illiteralism & a Flowering Cacophony' now on view at Marianne Boesky Gallery

Turning 100, the New Jersey Symphony sticks to home

Penicillin pioneer's Nobel Prize at Bonhams

Sarah Sze transforms Victorian waiting room in Peckham with large-scale installation

Anna Shay, star of Netflix's 'Bling Empire,' dies at 62

Ancient human relatives buried their dead in caves, new theory claims

Review: In 'The Comeuppance,' a bigger, chillier big chill

Ama Ata Aidoo, groundbreaking Ghanaian writer, dies at 81

Review: In 'Days of Wine and Roses,' two souls lost in an ocean of booze

Top 3 Dental Secrets Only A Dentist Can Tell You

Mp3Juice.sx - The Game-Changing Platform for Music Lovers Everywhere

YTMP3.im - World Class YouTube-to-MP3 Conversion for Optimal Audio Quality

Reinventing Job Searches with the Recruitment Application Portal by Vacancy News

Mastering the Art of Self-Control: Unleashing Your Inner Strength

All About SAP Certification




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful