London: The Mystery of Appearance

Overview

tmoa_exh11_main

Conversations Between Ten British Post-War Painters

07 Dec - 18 Feb 2012

Haunch of Venison London presents an exhibition of ten of Britain’s most important post-war painters, revealing the story behind their art.

'The Mystery of Appearance' is a fresh appraisal of ten artists - Michael Andrews, Frank Auerbach, Francis Bacon, Patrick Caulfield, William Coldstream, Lucian Freud, Richard Hamilton, David Hockney, Leon Kossoff and Euan Uglow - with a display of over forty paintings and drawings including works that haven’t been on public display for decades.

In the mid-twentieth century this group of artists revived portrait and landscape painting at a time when abstract painting dominated. Their continued influence on a younger generation of artists is demonstrated by the powerful hold figurative art has today.

The exhibition examines the influence of the personal relationships between these artists, some of which began in the late forties at the Slade where Coldstream, Freud and Hamilton taught and Andrews and Uglow studied; and then again at the Royal College of Art, where Auerbach, Caulfield, Hockney and Kossoff were students. Supported by a catalogue essay in which the curator Catherine Lampert discusses their habits and methods and introduces previously unseen writing by the artists, the exhibition will look at the way their conversations impacted on the development of their work, demonstrating that despite their wide-ranging styles they are each linked by a desire to catch what Bacon describes as ‘the mystery of appearance within the mystery of making’, and in doing so broke new ground in contemporary painting

The exhibition includes major works by each artist, several borrowed from public collections, among them Francis Bacon’s Pope I.1951. from Aberdeen Art Gallery, David Hockney’s Man in a Museum, 1962. from the British Council and others like Frank Auerbach’s Primrose Hill, Winter Sunshine, 1962-64, and Euan Uglow’s Nude, Lady C, 1959-60. which have not been seen in public for many years.

'The Mystery of Appearance' is displayed across the four galleries in Haunch of Venison’s newly renovated space. The first gallery shows a selection of nudes by Auerbach, Coldstream, Freud, Hamilton and Uglow. They range from the heavily worked and abstracted to the finely calibrated and delicate and offer varied approaches to the observation and description of nudity.

The second gallery presents landscapes and portraits demonstrating how the group experimented with the materiality of paint. This is followed by a room that focuses on the special significance of the Old Masters to these artists, most of whom selected one of the ‘Artist’s Eye’ exhibitions at the National Gallery. This section of the display gathers works which have an initial reference to an Old Master painting or museum object. The final gallery is concerned with these artists’ interpretation of space and lens-based imagery – in architecture, in the natural environment and in the human body – transformed into a two-dimensional image.

'The Mystery of Appearance' features large and small scale paintings and drawings with a focus on the artists’ varied approach to paint and subject matter and the connections between their work. Given only three of these artists are still alive the exhibition is timely and poignant, setting out to re-evaluate a group of ten connected and hugely influential painters, exploring the motives, conversations and stories behind their art.

 

Selected Works

tmoa_andrews_02

MICHAEL ANDREWS

The Lord Mayor's Reception in Norwich Castle Keep, On the Eve of the Installation of the First Chancellor of the University of East Anglia, 1966-69

  • Oil and silkscreen on turaphot linen on canvas
  • 213.3 x 213.3 cm
  • Norfolk Museums and Archaeology Service, Norwich Castle Museum and Gallery
  • ©The Estate of Michael Andrews, Courtesy James Hyman Fine Art, London.
tmoa_andrews_01

MICHAEL ANDREWS

Study of a Head with a Green Turban, 1967

  • Oil on board
  • 24.9 x 21.6 cm
  • Private collection, courtesy Susannah Pollen Ltd.
  • ©The Estate of Michael Andrews, Courtesy James Hyman Fine Art, London.
tmoa_andrews_03

MICHAEL ANDREWS

The Thames at Low Tide, 1994-95

  • Oil on canvas
  • 182.9 x 167.6 cm
  • Private collection
  • ©The Estate of Michael Andrews, Courtesy James Hyman Fine Art, London.
tmoa_auerbach_01

FRANK AUERBACH

Reclining Figure, 1972

  • Oil on board
  • 38.1 x 40.6 cm
  • Private Collection, NY © Frank Auerbach
tmoa_auerbach_02

FRANK AUERBACH

Study of Primrose Hill, 1973-74

  • Oil on board
  • 121.9 x 121.9 cm
  • Private collection
  • © Frank Auerbach
tmoa_auerbach_04

FRANK AUERBACH

Primrose Hill, Winter Sunshine, 1962-64

  • Oil on board
  • 104.1 x 144.8 cm
  • Private Collection
  • © Frank Auerbach. Courtesy Marlborough Gallery.
tmoa_bacon_01

FRANCIS BACON

Pope I - Study after Pope Innocent X by Velazquez, 1951

  • Oil on canvas
  • 197.8 x 137.4 cm
  • Aberdeen Art Gallery and Museum Collections
  • © The Estate of Francis Bacon. All rights reserved. DACS 2011.
tmoa_caulfield_01

PATRICK CAULFIELD

Coloured Still Life, 1967

  • Acrylic on board
  • 56 x 89 cm
  • Pallant House Gallery
  • © The Estate of Patrick Caulfield. All rights reserved, DACS 2011
tmoa_caulfield_02

PATRICK CAULFIELD

Red, White and Black Still Life, 1966/1984

  • Acrylic on canvas laid down on board
  • 91.4 x 152.4 cm
  • Pauline Caulfield
  • © The Estate of Patrick Caulfield.
tmoa_freud_01

LUCIAN FREUD

Francis Bacon (study), 1951

  • Pencil and charcoal on paper
  • 54.7 x 42 cm
  • Private collection
  • © Lucian Freud Archive
tmoa_hamilton_01

RICHARD HAMILTON

Study for Re-Nude, 1953

  • Watercolour and pencil on paper
  • 53 x 33.6 cm
  • Pallant House Gallery
  • © Estate of Richard Hamilton. All rights reserved. DACS, 2011.
tmoa_hamilton_02

RICHARD HAMILTON

Mother and Child, 1984-85

  • Oil on canvas
  • 150 x 150 cm
  • Katherine and Keith L. Sachs
  • © The Estate of Richard Hamilton. All rights reserved. DACS, 2011.
tmoa_hamilton_03

RICHARD HAMILTON

Finn MacCool, 1983

  • Framed heliogravure, lift ground and spit-bite aquatint, engraving and burnisher on Rives paper
  • 76 x 56 cm
  • Alan Cristea Gallery
  • © The Estate of Richard Hamilton. All rights reserved. DACS
tmoa_hockney_01

DAVID HOCKNEY

The Room Tarzana, 1967

  • Acrylic on canvas
  • 243.8 x 243.8 cm
  • Private collection
  • © David Hockney
tmoa_hockney_02

DAVID HOCKNEY

John St. Clair, 1972

  • Coloured crayon and graphite on paper
  • 43.2 x 35.6 cm
  • Private collection
  • ©David Hockney
tmoa_kossoff_01

LEON KOSSOFF

A Woman Bathing (Study After Rembrandt), 1982

  • Oil on board
  • 58.4 x 48.3 cm
  • Private Collection
  • © Leon Kossoff
tmoa_kossoff_02

LEON KOSSOFF

Nude (Autumn Morning), 1971

  • Oil on board
  • 81 x 111 cm
  • Private collection
  • © Leon Kossoff
tmoa_kossoff_04

LEON KOSSOFF

Willesden Junction, Summer No.1, 1966

  • Oil on board
  • 91.4 x 152.4 cm
  • Private Collection
  • © Leon Kossoff
tmoa_uglow_01

EUAN UGLOW

Mosque at Çiftlik Koyou, 1966

  • Oil on canvas
  • 105 x 121 cm
  • Private Collection
  • © Estate of Euan Uglow, Courtesy of Browse & Darby
tmoa_uglow_02

EUAN UGLOW

Nude, Lady C, 1959-60

  • Oil on canvas
  • 75 x 101.5 cm
  • John and Julia Scott
  • © Estate of Euan Uglow. Courtesy of Browse & Darby.
 

Exhibition

tmoa_inst11_0005

The Mystery of Appearance

Conversations Between Ten British Post-War Painters

  • Installation view
  • Photo: Peter Mallet
tmoa_inst11_0006

The Mystery of Appearance

Conversations Between Ten British Post-War Painters

  • Installation view
  • Photo: Peter Mallet
tmoa_inst11_0013

The Mystery of Appearance

  • Installation view
  • Photo: Peter Mallet
tmoa_inst11_0012

The Mystery of Appearance

Conversations Between Ten British Post-War Painters

  • Installation view
  • Photo: Peter Mallet
tmoa_inst11_0003

The Mystery of Appearance

Conversations Between Ten British Post-War Painters

  • Installation view
  • Photo: Peter Mallet
tmoa_inst11_0011

The Mystery of Appearance

Conversations Between Ten British Post-War Painters

  • Installation view
  • Photo: Peter Mallet
tmoa_inst11_0010

The Mystery of Appearance

Conversations Between Ten British Post-War Painters

  • Installation view
  • Photo: Peter Mallet
tmoa_inst11_0004

The Mystery of Appearance

Conversations Between Ten British Post-War Painters

  • Installation view
  • Photo: Peter Mallet
tmoa_inst11_0009

The Mystery of Appearance

Conversations Between Ten British Post-War Painters

  • Installation view
  • Photo: Peter Mallet
tmoa_inst11_0018

The Mystery of Appearance

Conversations Between Ten British Post-War Painters

  • Installation view
  • Photo: Peter Mallet
tmoa_inst11_0016

The Mystery of Appearance

Conversations Between Ten British Post-War Painters

  • Installation view
  • Photo: Peter Mallet
tmoa_inst11_0017

The Mystery of Appearance

Conversations Between Ten British Post-War Painters

  • Installation view
  • Photo: Peter Mallet
tmoa_inst11_0020

The Mystery of Appearance

Conversations Between Ten British Post-War Painters

  • Installation view
  • Photo: Peter Mallet
tmoa_inst11_0019

The Mystery of Appearance

Conversations Between Ten British Post-War Painters

  • Installation view
  • Photo: Peter Mallet
tmoa_inst11_0008

The Mystery of Appearance

Conversations Between Ten British Post-War Painters

  • Installation view
  • Photo: Peter Mallet
tmoa_inst11_0002

The Mystery of Appearance

Conversations Between Ten British Post-War Painters

  • Installation view
  • Photo: Peter Mallet
tmoa_inst11_0001

The Mystery of Appearance

Conversations Between Ten British Post-War Painters

  • Installation view
  • Photo: Peter Mallet
tmoa_inst11_0021

The Mystery of Appearance

Conversations Between Ten British Post-War Painters

  • Installation view
  • Photo: Peter Mallet
 
Back to Exhibitions