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Monday, January 19, 2026 |
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| Vardaxoglou unveils raw, never-before-seen final works by Roger Hilton |
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Roger Hilton, Cock, 1973. Gouache and charcoal on paper, 39.3 x 55.8 cm (15 1/2 x 22 ins).
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LONDON.- Vardaxoglou will present a group of previously unseen gouaches by British artist Roger Hilton from the artists estate. Produced during the final three years of the artists life, the exhibition shows Hiltons reflection on figuration, embodiment, and artistic agency under conditions of physical decline.
Fifty years ago, in 1975, Roger Hilton died of a stroke aged 64 at his home near St Ives. The artist had been confined to his bed in Cornwall due to severe mental and physical illness since 1973 and was slowly losing the use of his arms and legs. He began to play with paints given to his son at Christmas 1972, resulting in a series of gouaches exploring art, sex, life, and death. Animals, birds, figures, and boats are expressed with apparent abandon yet with great control. The bedroom became his studio, allowing him to work whenever he felt inclined, whether during the day or in the middle of the night. Like Picasso, artistic frenzy and freedom characterised the final years of Hiltons life; he completely detached himself from the expectations of critics and colleagues.
A prisoner of war for three years from 1942, captured at Dieppe, Roger Hilton knew the reality of human suffering and cruelty. Following his return, he saw life as a gratuitous gift. In the 1950s and 60s, Hilton set out to reinvent figuration and became well known for paintings in which simple line and paint simultaneously communicated abstract composition and the image of a figure. Despite his geographical proximity to St Ives and his frequent association with its artists, Hilton consciously separated himself from the group and actively experimented with new ways of painting the figure. As Chris Stephens writes, in the 21st century, Hiltons position lies somewhere between the pure modernism of Europe in the early 20th century and the postmodern figuration of Hockney and the neo-expressionist work of artists such as Basquiat in the 1980s.
The paintings Hilton produced in the 1950s and 60s, including those shown at the Venice Biennale in 1964, appear non-representational but constantly reference aspects of the human body. Certain forms recur throughout these earlier works: a few lines might suggest pubic or armpit hair, nipples, navels, an anus, vulva, or penis. The explicitness is subtle. In the late gouaches in this exhibition, however, his reinvention of figuration is no longer concealed within abstraction but moves towards direct, raw expression. Hilton came up with a set of principles that allowed for the apparent spontaneity of the works:
Since 1972 I have produced three to five gouaches a day. I have principles connected with this new medium:
1. Never rub out or attempt to erase. Work round it if you have made a mistake. Make of your mistakes a strength rather than a weakness.
2. Wait for it. That is, if you dont get a clear message, do nothing.
3. If you have a full brush and you have made a mark, do not think that you have to use the paint on your brush wash it out.
4. As in life, it is not so much what you put in but what you leave out that counts.
5. Paint as if you were painting a wall (Bissiere).
6. No colour stands alone. They are all influenced by each other. This is when the dicey part comes in. I mean the balancing act.
7. Most pictures can be pulled round. If you run into head winds, tear it up.
8. Dont drink and smoke so much & lay off the nudes. Nice, but too easy a gambit.
Hilton said that children are realists and artists are not. His late works show an artist engaging with this realism. Upon visiting Hiltons studio just days before he died, Hilton told Michael Canney, Theres nothing else left what else have I got?. Shortly before his death, Hilton was singing childhood nursery rhymes, including Daddy wouldnt buy me a bow-wow. The final gouaches in this exhibition possess something of this innocence, and show the degree to which these works operate at the intersection of regression and clarity, vulnerability and resolve.
The gouaches produced in the final years of Roger Hiltons life stand as a testament to artistic persistence under extreme constraint. They reveal an artist who, faced with physical incapacitation and the proximity of death, reaffirmed the necessity of making as an ethical and existential act. The works included in Imminent Death occupy a crucial position in Hiltons output, offering both a summation and a reorientation of his engagement with figuration, abstraction, and the conditions of artistic practice itself.
Roger Hilton (19111975) studied at Slade School of Fine Art (1929-31) and Academie Ranson, Paris (1931). In 1940 Hilton fought in the Commandos during the War and from 194245 was held Prisoner of War in Dieppe. Hilton represented Britain at the Venice Biennale in 1964. Major solo exhibitions and retrospectives include: Kettle's Yard, Cambridge (2009); Tate St. Ives (2006); Hayward Gallery, London (1993); Serpentine Gallery, London (1974). Hilton's work can be found in the public collections of The Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge; Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam; Tate, London; Arts Council Collection; Walker Art Gallery, Liverpool; Government Art Collection; National Portrait Gallery, London.
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