LONDON.- When Simon Hantaï unlocked his now renowned pliage method in 1960, the Hungarian-born, Paris-based artist achieved such overwhelming success in France that it would eventually force him to completely withdraw from the art world. Often referred to as a silence or, as Alfred Pacquement more accurately described, a critical silence Hantaïs exit was less a retirement than a period of reflection and intellectual consolidation. From 1982 onwards he made no new paintings and would seldom exhibit, despite consistent invitations from dedicated curators. Hantaï died in 2008.
In 2013, the Centre Pompidou, Paris, mounted a major retrospective that introduced Hantaïs significant artistic contribution to a new and responsive audience.
Timothy Taylor subsequently brought the artists work to the London public through a group exhibition at the end of that year and has since followed this in greater depth through the presentation of fifteen paintings across two exhibitions; the first of these took place at Frieze Masters in October, 2015, with a now larger exhibition at Timothy Taylors Mayfair gallery, 22 January until 5 March 2016.
When Hantaï arrived in Paris in 1948 from Soviet-occupied Budapest, Surrealism was in full swing. He quickly connected to one of the movements main proponents, André Breton, who became an immediate supporter. In the late 1950s, however, under the influence of Jackson Pollock, Hantaï departed from his figurative Surrealist paintings and began to experiment with unconventional painting instruments, and with writing, as gesture.
In 1960 Hantaï made a break with form, beginning his first pliage paintings, which would provide the critical basis of his work until his death. The technique of folding, knotting, painting, and unfolding the canvas allowed Hantaï to develop an automatic process, producing paintings that juxtaposed the naked material against bright colours, to create striking, sumptuous images.
Since the start of the 1980s a number of collections of Hantaïs work have been assembled that incorporate examples from each of his key series. The most well- known of these collections was gifted by Hantaï to the Centre Pompidou in 2003 and was drawn upon as part of the 2013 retrospective. A second collection, acquired privately in the early 1980s has since remained in storage, with only one of the fifteen works having been exhibited in the artists lifetime. Timothy Taylor is honoured to bring this remarkable collection to public attention.