Wednesday, 20 January 2010
Dru Donovan
Friday, 15 January 2010
William Gear
Scottish painter William Gear was something of an unsung original talent in his time; a great shame given how bold, modern and playful his work is. Whilst definitely abstract, the shapes and patterns in his work come from his love of landscape and natural forms.
Born in 1915, Gear studied at the Edinburgh College of Art, and then went on to Paris in the late 1930s where he studied with Fernard Leger, whose complex compositions and bold use of colour had a marked affect on Gear. He was drafted into the military during World War II but managed to continue painting, even exhibiting work in Jerusalem, Tel Aviv, Cairo and Germany. In 1947 after he was released from service he returned to Paris and worked prolifically, spending time with other emerging abstract artists and become affiliated to the CoBrA art movement, who espoused complete freedom of colour and form in there work (plus a dislike of Surrealism!) Gear’s reputation grew and his work was shown alongside Jackson Pollock’s in New York, but he was never fully appreciated back home. His ‘Autum Landscape’ painting of 1951 was included in the Festival of Britain that year, but the Daily Telegraph described it as “linoleum-design art” and the president of the Royal Academy, Sir Alfred Munnings, described it as a “scheming, self-conscious, anglicised, fifty-year old repetition of the École de Paris”. Not exactly what an artist wants to hear!
The distillation of natural forms, and the complex web-like structures or bold shapes were far more considered and involved than that, and much of his work still looks contemporary today. Gear continued to work well into his 70s – see the fantastic abstracts below from 1988 – and died in 1997.
Thursday, 7 January 2010
Kwakwaka’wakw art
Some work by various members of the Kwakwaka’wakw Nation to start the new decade. An indigenous group who live on or near to Vancouver Island, they have a rich history of art and culture, and the images of the sacred creatures – ravens, bears, salmon, eagles, etc – their artists produce seem particularly bold and dynamic within the Native American tradition. The graphic simplicity of this work is really effective, and whilst the Kwakwaka’wakw’s traditions stretch back centuries, these contemporary serigraphs would be at home next to work by people like Charlie Harper, Otl Aicher or Paul Ibou.