“Try,
All Ways,
Any Way,
Every Way,
Only Try,
To find
YOUR OWN WAY.”
Sybil Andrews
All Ways,
Any Way,
Every Way,
Only Try,
To find
YOUR OWN WAY.”
Sybil Andrews
The
British/Canadian artist Sybil Andrews’
first job after leaving school was as an apprentice welder in an aircraft
factory building the first metal airplanes during World War I. During the Second
World War she returned to the trade in the shipyard of the British Power Boat Company. During the period between the
wars Andrews’ pursued her childhood dream of becoming an artist.
As reported by Michael Parkin in the Independent
newspaper “We had a paint-box from the cradle,” Andrews said, “not with the
idea of being wonderful artists, but as a way of keeping us quiet and amused.”
But art was more than an amusement for Andrews and in the final years of
her welding apprenticeship she took John Hassall's Art Correspondence Course.
Such was her ability that upon its completion Andrews became an art teacher at the
Portland House School in the British market town of Bury St Edmunds.
In 1922 at the age of 24 Andrews moved to London to attend the Heatherley's
School of Fine Art. This was followed by her attendance at The Grosvenor
School of Modern Art where she worked as a secretary to fund her tution.
It was at The Grosvenor that Andrews’ found her artistic voice through
the medium of the linocut and the inspiration of the Modernists. Often collaborating
with fellow artist Cyril Power, Andrews’ produced a body of work that
concentrated upon sport, urban life, manual work and religion as subject
matter.
Andrews created pared-down images that used color to express, rather
than depict, the detail in her images. A process she likened to a madrigal
with a Soprano, a Treble, a Tenor and a Bass.
And about which she has said “The linocut print is not simple or easy.
First the carving of the blocks – each in itself can be exciting, a low-relief
carving in its own right. The long careful printing, which is hard work,
several times each block, all take energy and time.”
In 1947 Andrews along with her husband Walter Morgan immigrated to
Canada to escape the “poor
British economy after World War II and the rigid British class system.”
They settled in an ocean front cottage in the remote British Columbia town of
Campbell River.
For the next
45 years Andrews would continue to make her linocuts and augment their meager
income by teaching. An endeavored in which she tried to bring out an individual way of seeing for each of her pupils.
And about which she has said “My teaching grew just as a plant or tree
grows, leaf by leaf, branch by branch, and a tree takes a lifetime in its
growing.”
London’s Osborne Samuel
Modern and Contemporary Art has a selection of Andrews’ works on show until
the 10th of October to coincide with the publication of Sybil Andrews A Complete Catalogue.
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