In the
1950s a small group of painters who shared the same artistic concerns and were
connected by ties of friendship and mutual admiration explored the appearance
and vulnerability of the body, with the city of London as their surrounding
context. Through the depiction of the figure and their own everyday landscape,
these artists conveyed the delicacy and vitality of the human condition while
simultaneously developing new approaches and styles, reinventing their manner
of representing life with pronounced individuality and imbuing painting with a
rare intensity.
Hockney, David - Mr and Mrs Clark and Percy - Tate Britain, Londres
While
most of the artists achieved critical recognition from the outset, public
recognition was slower to arrive, primarily because art centred on the human
figure was underestimated from the 1960s to the 1980s, years when abstraction
and conceptual art were the prevailing forms of artistic expression. As the
exhibition’s curator Elena Crippa has observed, for many years the work of
these painters seemed to clash overtly with the artistic discourse of the time,
but over the past few decades it has been reassessed and has now been located
in a central position that allows for a “richer and more complex understanding
of the art and culture of the post-war period.”
Michael Andrews. A Man who Suddenly Fell Over, 1953
Oil paint on hardboard, 120.6 x 172.7 cm. Tate: Purchased 1958
© Tate, London 2017 © The Estate of Michael Andrews, courtesy of James Hyman Gallery, London
Oil paint on hardboard, 120.6 x 172.7 cm. Tate: Purchased 1958
© Tate, London 2017 © The Estate of Michael Andrews, courtesy of James Hyman Gallery, London
London,
a city of artistic and personal encounters
After
World War II, London assumed the position of Europe’s moral capital. The United
Kingdom, which was not invaded in the war, played a strategic role at the end
of the conflict and had welcomed refugees of all nationalities fleeing the Nazi
regime. At the same time, continental Europe was recovering from invasion and
destruction. It was in the British capital that this group of artists
coincided, socialised and exhibited, rigorously evolving their own styles and
existential positions but with the common denominator of favouring figuration
over the prevailing abstraction. Through a markedly personal pictorial approach
to the depiction of the human condition in its intimate life moments and
encounters, their work emerged at a time when American art was enjoying a
period of strength in contrast to a debilitated Europe in the process of
reconstruction.
In front of The Dance (1988), by Paula Rego
These
painters, who knew each other and socialised in pubs in the Soho district of
London, essentially painted people from their immediate circle such as the
friends, relatives and lovers who were present in their daily lives. With
Auerbach, Bomberg, Freud, Coldstream, Kossoff and Uglow, painting generally
arose from a direct encounter with the motif to be depicted, frequently
involving numerous sittings over a period of months or even years. In contrast,
Andrews, Kitaj, Rego and above all Bacon tended to represent reality from the
starting point of previously reproduced images, either in the form of
photographs, films, books, magazines and newspapers or other works of art.
Oil paint on canvas, 51 x 40.9 cm. Tate: Presented anonymously 1994
© Tate, London 2017 © The Lucian Freud Archive/Bridgeman Images
In
addition to depicting the human body these artists frequently focused their
gaze on the landscape around them, specifically the streets of London where
they lived. The urban landscape of a city that was being rebuilt after
considerable wartime bombing offered a stimulating subject for these young
painters, who continued to depict it on their canvases during the long years of
reconstruction in the 1950s and 1960s. Some also turned their attention in an
occasional or systematic way to their immediate environment: their studio or
less familiar landscapes encountered on their travels.
Lucian Freud (1922 - 2011) Girl with a White Dog 1950-1951 Oil on canvas 76.2 x 101.6 cm Tate Gallery, London
Lucian Freud (1922 - 2011) Girl with a White Dog 1950-1951 Oil on canvas 76.2 x 101.6 cm Tate Gallery, London
This
exhibition, on view at Museo Picasso Málaga until 17 September 2017,
brings together Francis Bacon’s powerful solitude, Lucian Freud’s carnal angst,
Michael Andrews’ encapsulated ego, Frank Auerbach’s three-dimensional painting,
David Bomberg’s emotional force, William Coldstream’s rigorous measure, Ronald
B. Kitaj’s multiplicity, Leon Kossoff’s visceral quality, Paula Rego’s
subversion and Euan Uglow’s proportion, all of them artists associated with
what has come to be referred to as the School of London, a label that has not,
however, been accepted by art historians or by the artists themselves.
Exhibition
publication
In
conjunction with the exhibition, Museo Picasso Málaga is publishing The School
of London, which features texts by its curator Elena Crippa and by art
historian Catherine Lampert. This hardback book has large-format illustrations
and three fold-out triptychs in addition to photographs and biographies of the
ten artists represented in the exhibition. In addition, all visitors will be
given a 20-page bilingual brochure (Spanish-English) covering the different
sections in the exhibition.
More images
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