"I don't want to be logical."
Charles Blackman
Charles Blackman
At the age of 87, Charles Blackman is
one of Australia’s most famous living artists and whilst no longer painting he
does a life drawing session once a fortnight at the house of his long term
friend and fellow artist Judy Cassab.
"He doesn't talk much. We
draw, we have a coffee. It's just great to see him work." Cassab
told Melbourne’s Age
Newspaper in 2006.
For the last 20 years Blackman
has been suffering from Korsakoff's syndrome, a form of dementia caused
by chronic alcoholism. Blackman suffered a stroke in 1994 caused by his
drinking and since then has required full time care which has been funded by
auctioning off what little of his earlier work has remained in his possession
along with the sale of prints and current drawings.
With three failed marriages to
his credit significant bodies of his work left his hands in divorce settlements
with many now hanging in prestigious national institutions. For success came
early in Blackman’s career.
He was in his 20s when
critical acclaim and recognition came his way with his Schoolgirl paintings and the famed 43 paintings in his Alice in Wonderland series. With his first
wife, Barbara, as his muse Blackman encountered the Lewis Carroll masterpiece as
a talking book purchased for his blind spouse. As he has said about hearing the
tale "I hadn't read it, so I didn't see any illustrations of it, I came to
it cold."
Shortly later Blackman was awarded
a Helena Rubenstein scholarship which enabled him to follow his friends
to London. Melbourne had lost is appeal, as he recalled later "Everybody's
poor, there was six o'clock closing, it was hard to go to the pictures because
it was too expensive. I came to the conclusion that's not what I want out of
life."
As his eldest son Auguste has
said about the six London years "There was never a chance for life to be boring.
Everyone would congregate at our house because Charles and Barbara were the
most fun."
Although Blackman’s friend,
the world famous entertainer, Barry Humphries saw a different side to the artist.
He observed “a very restless and
solitary figure. He could be terribly sarcastic and very biting and unkind to
people who couldn't strike back. His cruelty was especially notorious when he'd
had a few drinks."
After 27 years of marriage,
which included a year in Paris, Barbara divorced him saying "Dr. Charles
Jekyll turned into Mr. Charlie Hyde."
Blackman’s two subsequent
marriages also ended badly. And throughout, as Auguste recalled, "Everyone
drank. It was almost like a competition. These were the most creative people in
the country and they needed that anesthetic. To be able to stop and laugh you
needed to have the wine."
Like his painting, dinking is
now a thing of the past. Although Blackman’s paintings are still revered. As
the art critic Bernard Smith wrote "It is no simple matter to
define the peculiar feel of his strange presences. They are like dreams that
break off only half-remembered: the deep questioning of eyes in shy faces, the
pleasure of simple things, like a bunch of flowers, in a world fed on the sensational
and horrific."
And as Blackman told ABC television “Painting, to me, is not all an
autobiographical thing. It's things you observe around you, or you are
interested in what other people do with their lives. It's a simple
straightforward activity.”
Blackman’s latest
exhibition in association with Australian artist David Bromley and the
newly formed Blackman
Studio Down the Rabbit Hole is on
show at Western Australia’s Gullotti
Galleries until the 21st of August.
No comments:
Post a Comment