Its loveliness increases it will never
Pass into nothingness... -Keats
Maybe we all need a little joy in our lives every now and then? That question is largely rhetorical. Maybe I am getting older and am more conscious about what is happening politically in the world but in my lifetime, I do not remember a time as wrought as the one we are living in now; for that reason and the colder, darker winter days, I think that we need things that are inherently uplifting to compensate. And it is ‘joy’ that is the resonating theme present in the work and literally in the accompanying text, mentioned not once but several times, which describes the work of Albert Irvin [1922-2015] whose epic sized paintings are on display alongside his prints, early paintings and works by abstract expressionist painters (who influenced him) in an exhibition on at the Royal West of England Academy (RWA) in Bristol.
Albert Irvin -Northcote (1989) and Rosetta (2012) Acrylic on canvas at the RWA |
Text in the catalogue aside, the effect of walking into
the gallery containing large-scale works radiating with colour, huge, clean
sweeping brush-marks in dynamic strokes and patchwork quilt-like shapes, has as an immediate impact on the senses. Oranges, pinks,
reds next to greens; complementary colours zinging and dancing from left to
right in an assortment of shapes, daubs, dots and strokes that, I defy, almost
regardless of one’s personal taste in art, not to widen their eyes in
reaction to confronting a room full of Irvin’s paintings. Colour is incredibly
emotive and perhaps more-so in the winter when we are faced with less of it on
a daily existence. Personally, I found the first room of the RWA exhibition to
be joyous for that reason. Although I am interested at analysing whether it was
a joy because of the colours in the paintings or whether that sense
of joy comes from what Irvin has done with colour? It is probably a combination
of both, but part of me wondered if there was an element of the Duchampian
ready-made to how some of the Abstract Expressionist painters used colour.
Barnett Newman and Rothko weren’t so much creating ‘red’ as though we had never
seen it, as they were presenting ‘red’, a colour, for what it is. Attempting to
give space or volume to something which exists but maybe we never fully notice
or experience (similar to that of Duchamp putting a urinal and calling it art).
Yet, I also appreciate that a Rothko and a Newman are completely different in their treatment of how they applied colour to canvas, that creates different mood
and feeling; I think I am just curious as to where my response to these works
lies, in the colour (doing what colour does naturally) or in what artists, in this instance, Irvin do
with it.
The highlights for me are Irvin’s paintings from the 70s onwards, around about the time he started working with acrylic paint and is said he,
‘took to their [acrylics] properties immediately. Working horizontally
stopped the inevitable run-off of water-thinned paint from top to bottom, and
by placing the canvas stretcher on large cans, he was able to reduce the drying
time of the saturated surface…’
These paintings are deceptively simple in their cleanness
of how colour is applied in shapes and layered without becoming muddied almost textile-like or reminiscent of Matisse’s paper-cuts, and it is an interesting parallel to see Irvin’s
thought processes displayed in the exhibition as using coloured paper scraps to
build his compositions before he scaled them up into paintings. Incidentally, the
vitrine displaying some of the paper cuttings alongside a pair of Irvin’s paint
splattered shoes, brushes and paint cans was an unexpected highlight. The old
irony ringing true for all artists it seems that the palette used to the mix
the paint is often more interesting than the resulting painting... that unintentional
freshness so difficult to recreate. Though Irvin does retain some of that
sensitivity to knowing when to not overdo a painting and allow certain colours
and shapes space. Arrived as if by magic by anyone who has ever tried to create
an abstract painting and been left with a muddy, chaotic over-worked mess. It
is harder than it looks.
Kestrel (1981) Acrylic on canvas. 213 x 305 |
Untitled 3 (mid 1970s) Acrylic on canvas. 213 x 305 |
Untitled 6 (1975) Acrylic on canvas. 178 x |
Albert Irvin and
Abstract Expressionism is on at the RWA until March 3rd 2019
https://shop.rwa.org.uk/collections/events/products/albert-irvin-and-american-abstract-expressionism
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