“The closer the
painting is to a diagram or graph, the nearer it is to my intentions.”
Jack Smith
Jack Smith
Is a person’s appearance a
necessary constituent of portraiture or are there are other ways of evoking a
human presence? This is the central question that surrounds British
geometric abstract artist Jack Smith’s
portraits currently on show at London’s National
Portrait Gallery. As the gallery’s curator of 20th Century portraits, John
Moorhouse, told London’s Telegraph
newspaper “This display of Jack
Smith’s abstract portraits is a first for the National Portrait Gallery as
Smith’s paintings dispense with human appearance entirely.”
Graduating from the Royal
College of Art in the early 1950’s Smith was a social realist painter depicting
the scenes of his working class background. He was included as a member of the “Kitchen
Sink School” that commented upon the drab everyday life of British post war
austerity. It was an association Smith rejected saying “This had nothing to do
with social comment. If I lived in a palace I would have painted the
chandeliers.”
Smith was more involved with
the painterly concerns of light, form and pattern. This by the 1960’s had seen
him abandon social realism in favor of abstraction. He painted sharply defined
objects against a plain background, about which he has said “I like every work
to establish a fact in the most precise, economical way.”
For the National Portrait Gallery
display Smith’s portraits of composers Harrison Birtwistle and Colin Matthews,
who met whilst designing stage settings for Ballet Rambert and the Royal Ballet
respectively, have be included. “Their music is who they are, really... So I
had to find forms and language that would tell me something about their music,”
ArtLyst reports Smith as
saying.
Meanwhile the
National Portrait Gallery says in its exhibition notes “Portraiture is conventionally thought to be
inseparable from the depiction of a sitter’s appearance. The human face
forms the basis of recognition and its expressions convey emotion. But
can portraiture evoke a human presence in other ways? Also, is a human being
only a face, or are there other characteristics and areas of human experience
that portraiture can address?”
Along with the composers the
exhibition includes Smith’s portrait of choreographer Ashley Page and a
self portrait. All are on show until the 31st of August.
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