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CONTEXTS

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Graham Sutherland

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I find myself having sympathy for Graham Sutherland's Pembrokeshire compositions . Not so much for the work in themselves, which are nonetheless very beautiful, but more in the way the artist’s thinking and methodology informs my own practice. 

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The artist produces his more abstracted paintings in a similar manner to the way I wish to approach my Velinheli drawings. He thinks in terms of the “subconscious mind out of which emerge...reconstructed and recreated images”. This feels like the way in which I also attempt to figure things out in my Velinheli compositions, by a certain sense of instinct and drawing as a form of thinking1. Furthermore, his poetic style, which follows the tenets of Coleridge that “poetry gives most pleasure when generally and not perfectly understood” encourages me to consider the aesthetic value in not making images ”explicit”2. Although I do not share Sutherland‘s religious undertones, the idea of abstraction in order to share something of the ”inner life and mystery of the subject” is still appealing. The uniformity and logic that is inherent in the architectural design source material of king’s cross station invites the audience to consider the work like a puzzle which somehow has an uncanny order and structure that they can’t quite grasp without taking the time to really look.  

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Sutherlands’s Devastation: City Twisted Girders (1941) illustrates the way in which the artist plays with architectural forms, in this case girders torn and bent apart into powerful arabesques that create a “rhythmic design” I covet for my own composition. 

 

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Another poignant example of the artist’s process is Thorn Trees (1945). The thorns in this composition have become razor sharp, the lethal projections of a world reeling from the cruelty and barbarism of the second world war3. The artists evocative, metaphorical style, grounded in the automatism of imagination and the collection of forms is a way for me to also approach my own work. It suggests the possibility of creating abstracted imagery that could act as a microcosm to one’s inner emotional psyche through the unconscious act of drawing. 

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Foot Notes

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  1. Hayes, J.T. (1981). The art of Graham Sutherland. Oxford: Phaidon. p16

  2. Ibid p17

  3. http://visualarts.britishcouncil.org/collection/artists/sutherland-graham-1903/object/thorn-trees-sutherland-1945-p74 

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c462693e4a6f196798addb006f6abf13--english-artists-british-artists.jpg

Graham Sutherland, Devastation 1941: City, Twisted Girders, 1941, (ink & crayon on paper) 65.4x112.4 cms, © Ferens Art Gallery / Bridgeman Images

devastation-1941-city-twisted-girders-1-14965646.jpg.webp

Graham  Sutherland, Thorn Trees, 1945 oil on cardboard support 108.6 x 100 cm, Collection Albright-Knox Art Gallery, Bufallo, New York

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devastation-1941-city-twisted-girders-1-14965646.jpg.webp
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