'Springing to Life: Drawings by Leon Kossoff' now opening at Annely Juda Fine Art

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'Springing to Life: Drawings by Leon Kossoff' now opening at Annely Juda Fine Art
Embankment Underground Station, 1993. Pastel and charcoal on paper, 59.5 x 69 cm.



LONDON.- Today Annely Juda Fine Art is opening Springing to Life a survey of an extraordinary body of drawings by Leon Kossoff (b. 1926, d. 2019) curated by Andrea Rose, editor of the artist’s Catalogue Raisonné. The exhibition will include drawings from 1943 up to some of Kossoff’s last drawings of 2014, some of which have never been seen before.

Acknowledged as one of the world’s greatest post war figurative painters, Kossoff’s paintings are recognisable by his heavily worked impasto paint surface and brushwork. Central to his practise was also a constant desire to draw and sketch from life. Whether in pencil, charcoal, pastel or crayon on paper his drawings show him to be a consummate draftsman capable of subtle delicacy as seen in the intimate sketches of his sleeping baby son to the vivid expansive marks used to capture scenes of industrial London.

From early drawings of his immediate family circle the exhibition broadens out into the vast amphitheatre of London: its railways, bridges, schools, swimming pools, churches and gardens. At Willesden Junction, where Kossoff had a studio in the early 1960s, the drawings become panoramic, the complexity of the railway site bringing out Kossoff’s fierce sense of spatial depth and his ability to create in two dimensions the mass, volume and extent of three. At Willesden Swimming Pool, newly built in 1965, the drawings crackle into life, bodies dissolving and re-shaping themselves as abstraction and figuration play catch-up round the pool. At equally busy Kilburn, Embankment and King’s Cross stations, people crowd in, their pressing flow washing through the capital. Kossoff seizes on all this while at the same time celebrating the grandeur of some of London’s architecture. On Willesden Lane, a red-brick Victorian school stands its ground. At Spitalfields, Christ Church reaches into the sky, transcending time and tide.

Kossoff also made many drawings on his frequent visits to the National Gallery where he would go early in the morning before the galleries opened to the public. In her catalogue essay, curator Andrea Rose writes ….”He made innumerable drawings from works in the collection. It was less a question of copying than searching the worlds of the Old Masters, closing the intervals between past and present. ‘ I suppose it’s the difference between looking and experiencing’ he once said when talking about Poussin’s Cephalus and Aurora”.

Kossoff grew up in London's East End and the post-war destruction of the City and neighbourhoods so familiar to him became a focus for his work. His sombre palette of greys and browns and heavy mark making depicting the desolation and devastation of the local community and industrial landscape. Peopled scenes of everyday life in and around where he lived and worked in Kilburn and Willesden pre-occupied his paintings throughout his life. He returned time and time again to observe and capture particular places and buildings including the high street, public buildings, swimming pool, railway bridges, sidings and stations. Towards the end of his career he painted gentler subjects such as the leaning cherry tree in his garden and also returned to favourite locations including King’s Cross St. Pancras station and Hawksmoor’s Christ Church, marking the passing of the years with more colourful hues and lighter handling.

Annely Juda Fine Art
Springing to Life: Drawings by Leon Kossoff
November 16th, 2023 - January 20th, 2024










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