Showing posts with label portraits. Show all posts
Showing posts with label portraits. Show all posts

13/03/2014

The Magnificent Lucian Freud



On Tuesday 5th June 2007, I went with Carol to see the Lucian Freud exhibition in the Irish Museum of Modern Art in Dublin. IMMA was housing 50 of his paintings and twenty of his etchings and drawings through the summer. It was a beautiful sunny day – though Carol (who hated the sun) thought it too hot. To say that I was hyperactive with excitement before hand is an understatement. Although I had seen isolated paintings by Freud in group shows - I had never seen any in quantity. Of the many artists who have influenced my own art (Picasso, Basquait, van Gogh, Schiele, Gerstl, Schnabel, de Kooning, Rembrandt, Goya, Baselitz, Bacon and Salle) Freud was the last painter I had yet to see in a major retrospective. To say that my expectations were met is to put it mildly. It was the greatest exhibition I had ever seen in Ireland – with the Francis Bacon show in 2000 a close second.
            

As you know, my infatuation with Freud began in early 1992 - at a time when I was executing a couple of life paintings in NCAD during the Easter and summer holidays. As a clumsy student - struggling to deal with the difficulties of life drawing and painting - I looked in awe at Freud's work - which because of their strange realist modernity effected me so much more deeply than any other painter of the figure. I also identified with Freud's somewhat naïve and self-taught approach to life-painting.
             

Although there was no doubt that Freud's work was riddled with the mannerism and naïve mistakes of the largely self-taught (he had some art training in his teens but nothing like the systematic drilling the old masters had to endure in order to achieve mastery) - his work had genuine integrity - something distinctly lacking in the modern art world of my day. He was also one of those rare artists like Courbet, Cézanne, van Gogh, Picasso and de Kooning whose awkwardness was compelling, heart-rending and honest.
             

Artists in the West since Raphael in the 1500s until Courbet in the late nineteenth century painted not only an idealized version of the nude - they typically painted the figure only as a prop in a larger visual story. Although western art had had its fair share of sexy nudes - typically, the figure was not painted nude in order to arouse sexual desire or even to analyze character - instead the nude was used as an expressive character in a visual play.                                                                                  


The breaking point in this tradition I would date to Gustave Courbet's The Origin of The World (1866) - an immaculately painted oil of a woman's lower torso - the bushy vagina at its centre. However, it was not until the turn of the twentieth century that artists like Lovis Corinth, Richard Gerstl, Egon Schiele, Max Beckman and Otto Dix turned the body into a psychological and psychosexual revealer of subjective truth - and it is by these artists that Freud had to be judged - he was part of their unofficial Expressionist/Realist school. This should have come as no surprise - he was born and lived in Berlin until the age of eleven - this was his cultural heritage. However, what England gave him was a sense of restraint and Conservative order.                                                    


I observed that in a world of noisy attention seeking loudmouths - Freud's reclusive silence spoke volumes. It was telling that in a world were simpletons wanted to tell you everything about themselves - none of which mattered a dam - a man like Freud kept his council (some of my readers might wish I had done the same.) This was part of his aristocratic baring (many of his closest friends were from the English Gentry.) Nagging Feminist's like Linda Nochlin who sought to attack him as a misogynist took great pains to tell of his philandering, his suspected 40 illegitimate children and his cruel abandonment of ex-lovers. I would simply have asked these women this: Do you really think I or any other male painter admired Freud because of his personal life? I can answer absolutely not! I admired Freud for one reason and one bloody simple reason only - his paintings! Personally, I found sniping attacks on Freud's supposed misogyny and misanthropy childish, simplistic and ignorant. So what if he was? He spoke his version of truth and that should have been good enough. From what I could see - he was as unflattering to men as he was to women. In a world of airbrushed photographs of super models - Freud's paintings were like a kick in the face to a culture of lies about the body and humanity.
           

In 2007, pornography in the tradition of Raphael lived on in the high budget, slick, and never anything but beautiful porn of L.A. However, one only had to look at the home videos of amateur porn stars to see both the real world and the world of Freud - deathly pale or sunburned, stick thin or obsess and ugly bodies of both great humanity and repulsive imperfection. It was Freud's grandfather Sigmund Freud who changed our conception of self-hood more than any other thinker in western history - so it should have come as no surprise that Lucian Freud should have gone on to paint the human face and figure in a way almost unseen in art before.
             

Most of Freud's large paintings took up to a year to paint and he worked on a number of canvases at a time. He painted almost exclusively from life. Posing for him was a long and sometimes arduous experience. The vast majority of his models were friends, lovers or family. He had painted at least three of his daughters naked - but I will leave it to others to discern the ‘Electra Complex' implications of that!  During breaks, he treated his sitters to champagne and pheasant and his was known as a great conversationalist. Like his great friend Francis Bacon, he loved to gamble. Those who knew him spoke of his charisma, intelligence and energy.
             

Critics like Andrew-Graham Dixon and Brian Sewell had stated that Freud - although a great realist painter - was not up to the standards of old masters like Velázquez, Ruben's and Rembrandt - I disagreed. I thought that at their best - Freud's canvases were as good as anything ever painted. Technically, he might have been clumsy and wilful in a way those old masters seldom were - but in my era, he was unique. While it was true to say that his working methods and ethos was very different from the methods of the old masters - that did not mean that his work was any less compelling.
             

In my lifetime, Freud had become the standard-bearer of the realist tradition. This was in part to due to his genius and in part because the tradition was so utterly bankrupt. The trouble with 95% of the realist art produced world wide - was its triviality, crassness and historical nostalgia. I seriously thought that most of these 'traditional' painters were stunned personalities who liked to retreat into some kind of fantasy they had about a Utopian age of representational art. They were the same kind of people who built model railways and embroidered quilts - insular, timid and deluded. Freud on the other hand had no such delusions. He was a fully formed personality, intellect and practitioner. Most of these pseudo-old-masters - were terrified of the ugly, strident, or obsessive. Therefore, their work was fit for nothing but the top of a biscuit tin. Freud on the other hand embraced the ugly - and made it look beautiful - the sign of a truly great artist in my opinion.
             

I was less interested in Freud's early paintings from the 1940s to the 1960s, and I considered the high point of his art to be from the late 1970s to the turning of the millennium - as his brushes got broader and his paint thicker. However these early painting explained his late masterpieces. From the outset, he was obsessed with the eyes of his sitters – indeed had anyone ever made eyes look so hypnotic? From the outset, he was fond of using a stippling of lines to define the form. From the beginning he worked on a white canvas - allowing it to gleam through the thinly spread paint. From the outset, he had a knowing ability to give hyperactive details to certain parts of the subject - while treating other parts in a more general way. However, he always knew how to marry the parts to the whole - in a way that had always escaped me in my own work. He was a master of detail - yet never in the annoying crotchety way that other realists were. His detail was never anything less than visceral and exciting. I was less fond of Freud's drawings and etchings. However, they did give some important clues to his art. In their way, his drawings had echoes of Dürer's woodcuts. Like Dürer - Freud used very dark and strong lines to shape the volumes of flesh.                                                


Freud's technique in his late work was nothing short of magnificent. This was real painting! I was amazed by how bold and confident his brushwork was! I was thrilled by the way he went for it with every brushstroke! There was no mistaking that a man painted these paintings. They had a fierce muscularity and vigour utterly lacking in the flabby and academic work of imitators like Jenny Saville, Celia Paul (an ex-lover of Freud's), Tai-Shan and an army of art student plagiarizers.                                            


The masterpiece of the exhibition for me was his large canvas Two Plants 1977-80 - it was quite simply unbelievable! From a distance, it looked like a photograph - but up close, it was a thickly painted nest of paint. Each single leaf in this tangle of plants was recorded in all its individuality - he did not use any formula. This painting and others he had made of foliage recalled Dürer's famous watercolour of a great piece of turf.
             

Critics had carped that Freud's paintings were all browns and greys! Were these people blind? Yes from a distance they could look brown and gray - but get up close - it was a fireworks display of pinks, blues, mauve's, purples, olives, tan, cream, white, apple green, peach, plum and so on. It was a mark of his genius for colour that he could embed in his flesh tones such bright colours and yet fit them all in to a realistic whole. Another remarkable quality of his late paintings was his use of thick impasto. One of the problems of using thick paint (as I knew) was that it reduced the artist’s ability to produce subtle effects of line and texture - but Freud managed it. His impasto was precise, firm and solid. He not only painted his figures - he sculpted them out of paint! I had never seen paint dry-brushed on with the loaded brush with such finesse and accuracy.
           

 In my view, Freud's art was a total rebuke to the corrupted nature of the contemporary art world. Could anyone honestly tell me that there was more depth and power in; Barnett Newman's zips, Frank Stella's stripes, Andy Warhol's candy coloured silkscreen portraits, Robert Ryman's all white canvases, Joseph Beuys' felt and fat, Donald Judd's steel boxes, Joseph Kosuth's definitions of words, Cindy Sherman's photos, Jeff's Koons' kitsch porcelains, Damien Hirst's spot paintings, or Tracey Emin's unmade bed! Frankly to my mind all that rubbish and so much more like it was exposed in an exhibition like this to be an utter fraud perpetrated by self-deluded morons with more salesmanship and skill in 'art-bollocks' than any actual creative vision, craft, skill, discipline or intelligence.

Treasures of the North 2007



"No art is less spontaneous than mine. What I do is the result of reflection and the study of the great masters."
 Edgar Degas.

One Saturday in late March 2007, I went to the National Gallery of Ireland with my girlfriend to see Treasures from the North. The exhibition, which included 60 'masterpieces' from The Ulster Museum, was in Dublin because the Ulster museum was undergoing refurbishment.  The work spanned an over two hundred-year period in Irish art from the eighteenth century up to the late twentieth century. Because the National Gallery already had the largest collection of Irish painting in the world by combining it with those from Ulster it was a unique opportunity for lovers of Irish art to see the largest collection of Irish painting ever assembled.                   
                                                                                                   

However, what did such a spectacle prove? Well firstly it proved that from the 1700s to the 1960s Ireland failed to produce any 'genius' like Goya, van Gogh, Picasso, Dalí, Pollock, or Warhol. Secondly, Ireland failed to produce even one excellent innovator like Blake, Turner, Monet, Matisse or Klee. Thirdly, Ireland failed to produce any master manipulator of paint like Tiepolo, Jean-Honoré Fragonard, David, Manet, Sargent or Freud. Finally, Ireland failed to produce a master technician in drawing like Watteau, Ingres, Degas or even Hockney. What we had produced was an army of embittered, provincial, alcoholic, blow-hards who thought themselves masters but lacked all of the qualities required except arrogance. A handful of Irish painters like James Barry, Daniel Maclise, Water Osborne, William Orpen, John Lavery, Jack B Yeats, Patrick Graham and Brian Maguire had shown themselves to have had real talent and sometimes great skill and passion, but for various reasons they had fallen just short of international level never mind get their foot on the first rung on the ladder of the immortals.                                                                                                                   


Oil painting on canvas was an art imposed by the British Empire on the poverty stricken Irish populace, which is why until the late twentieth century the Irish art world was dominated by a West Brit elite. It is also, why it was Irish poets and musicians were central to the battle for Irish Independence and not its painters closely tied with the British establishment. Most of Irelands greatest artists had to go to England or France to train, become familiar with the latest innovations and acquire the patronage vital to their survival as artists. The brief period of oil painting in Ireland saw artists fawn at the English establishment, bow to the Catholic Church, mythologies the land, become entranced by the Impressionist adventure in France, become fevered with Irish Independence and record the solitary and often lonely vocations of Modern painters unloved in their own country. It was an art dominated by the male portrait and the landscape - saucy female portraits never mind nudes were virtually non-existent even in mythological canvases.                          


I found the first one hundred and fifty years of Irish art from the Ulster museum an utter bore - all powdered wigs, deathly serious sitters and naïve uninspired drawing and painting. This period in art - when much of the work produced was the dull-witted commissions of pompous aristocrats seeking to be flattered - was one of my least favourites. Most of this art was the propaganda of a vain, incestuous world of craven blue bloods. Technically, it was a period of smooth glass like finish - invisible brushmarks and a subdued pallet of earth tones - pretty much everything my art and the art I admire is not. Though, a beautiful nude by James Barry the tortured and unrecognised genius of early Irish painting stood out. My enthusiasm picked up though when I came to a handful of beautiful canvases by John Lavery. Now this was painting! Some people swoon when they see the mark making of Pollock or de Kooning - but although from a distance Lavery's painting look quite conventional - up close they were a fireworks display of swift and passionate brushwork. Lavery seldom painted a bad picture and two of them in this show Daylight Raid From My Studio Window’ (1917) and The Green Coat (1926) - both of which featured his wife Lady Hazel Lavery - really did deserve to be called masterpieces. I loved Lavery's pallet - of daring apple green, lilac and rich mauve - which featured in many of his paintings. Also well presented were Rodrick O'Conor, Jake B Yeats and William Orpen.  Yet again, I found Yeat's mid career painting far more effective than his later work, which I often found repulsive and dangerously incompetent. The last painters represented in the show from the late twentieth century - were an astonishing let down. William Scott, Patrick Scott and TP Flanagan were all represented by some of their worst, most incompetent painted abstract scrawls. Only Basil Blackshaw's canvas stood up to even vague scrutiny - but he was nowhere near the 'master-painter' he was hailed by some in the Irish art world as being.                        


Before leaving, the National Gallery we went to the French rooms where some new acquisitions were on display. This included a portrait by Gabriele Munter, nudes in boats by Max Pechstein, a lunch by Bonnard and a small view of Paris by van Gogh. While I was delighted to see that, the National Gallery was becoming more aggressive in collecting twentieth century art - some of these choices bewildered me.                                                                                                                  

That none of these works were 'masterpieces' of world class level, was not surprising, given the budget restrictions of the National Gallery, but what I shocked by was how minor most of them were. I had never thought much of either Munter or Pechstein since the first thing I felt an Expressionist artist must possess - was a volcanic intensity - something neither of these mannerists possessed.  As for the Bonnard - while I enjoyed Bonnard's daring colours - I found his fuzzy lack of focus in drawing and brush marks to be irritating and hard to look at for long.  However, the little van Gogh was a gem - maybe not a masterpiece but a lovely optimistic painting recording the rooftops of Paris. I remembered how I was twenty-one before I saw my first van Gogh in Amsterdam, and I felt a wave of envy towards the children of the 'Celtic Tiger' in Dublin who could now see so much more art - than the generation before them. I hoped they appreciated it!