Showing posts with label F.E. McWilliam Gallery & Studio. Show all posts
Showing posts with label F.E. McWilliam Gallery & Studio. Show all posts

14/03/2014

Basil Blackshaw at Eighty



On 11th September 2012, Carol’s friend Anne drove us up to the F.E. McWilliam Gallery & Studio in Banbridge Co. Down to see a retrospective of paintings and drawings by Basil Blackshaw a painter’s painter who had been a hero of my old art teacher Kenneth Donfield. There were few Irish artists I would travel such a distance to see - but Basil Blackshaw was one of them. The border between North and South was so subtle that we looked around unsure if we had entered the North. But when we saw the Union Jack flying over housing estates - a primal shudder ran down my spine. Still apart from the flags there was little to distinguish between Republic of Ireland bungalows and Unionist bungalows. After a life time of watching ‘The Troubles’ on television, I had avoided Northern Ireland like the plague, so it was my first ever trip to the North and I was pleasantly surprised by how normal it was. The centre was a beautiful one with very friendly and helpful staff. Before going around the exhibition, Anne bought us coffees and delicious scones with cream and strawberry jam.                                                                                  

                 
I did not think much of F.E. McWilliam’s work, though I did find his more intimate and personal small sculptural maquettes more interesting than his large scale bronzes. I found F.E. McWilliam’s version of surrealism kitsch and inelegant and his expressionistic work inspired by the bombings of The Troubles unredeemably brutalistic. Looking at McWilliam’s various 3d playthings, it struck me again that sculpture could descend into abysmal kitsch faster than painting ever could. However, I admired F.E. McWilliam’s more conventional portraits and busts from early in his career – and it struck me again, that many regional artists had not profited from their modernist adventures. McWilliam seemed to have given up on such slow and deliberate study of form and turned to make a series of pastiches of fashionable styles - yet originating nothing. Still, I wondered what kind of artist he might have been if he had more integrity and courage to avoid the allure of each passing fad.                                                                      

 The retrospective of over sixty years of work by Basil Blackshaw proved to me that he was painting better and better. His early work was very strong and always wonderfully painterly with hints at an obsessive interest in Cézanne and Walter Sickert. More conservative art lovers must have been most impressed by his realist paintings and drawings of horse races but I found them somewhat irrelevant in the age of photography and lacking the intimacy of his paintings of his pets. Though, Blackshaw’s portraits of friends (mostly male) were evocative, I personally found his ‘portraits’ of his dogs and horses truly insightful and full of love and respect. Blackshaw never made a casual or sloppy brushstroke though his freedom and searching might have made the unsophisticated think otherwise. He was a master of creams, browns, greys, blacks and muted colours - yet his efforts at strong pure colour did not convince me.                                                                                   
                                                                
It was Blackshaw’s paintings since the age of sixty-eight that most impressed me. They married a modern day freedom reminiscent of Cy Twombly and even Basquiat (especially with their deployment of writing and painterly erasure) with a lifetime of realist skills and criticality – to create some of the strongest arguments in favour of contemporary painting. They were so much more than mere ideas in paint - they were paint come to life to embody a spiritual manifestation. His hard-won virtuosity went beyond uncritical illustration, tedious realism and crass expression into a painterly grandeur only a few ever achieved. In his late paintings he made everything look childishly easy - but as a fellow painter I knew what kind of mental and physical labour had gone into such final life affirming freedom. These late paintings were some of the very best and most relevant I had seen in years. I felt inspired to paint in the presence of such valiant and free expressions. Before we left we bought the catalogue for the exhibition, however I was disappointed when I saw how poorly lit, discoloured and unfocused the reproductions of the paintings were.                                                                                                                      

Strangely in retrospect, I found my initial impression of Blackshaw’s work diminished. His early work struck me as too academic and his later work overshadowed by the far greater examples of Cy Twombly and Jean Michel Basquiat, still he was one of the few real painters in Ireland.