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Patrick Heron

Early Paintings 1945–1955
2000年10月25日–11月18日

As Mel Gooding wrote, in his extensive monograph published in 1994, Heron was ‘a visual inventor of the first rank, an originator of images and a colourist of genius’. The paintings shown in this exhibition illustrate Heron’s early development between the years 1945 and 1955. His experimentation with the colour, texture, form and rhythm of paint acknowledges a debt to the great French modernists such as Braque, Matisse and Bonnard and foreshadowed his abstract paintings of the late 50’s, 60’s and 70’s. These paintings are characteristic of a time in which the artist was consolidating a style unmistakably his own. Although Heron spent his formative years in Cornwall, from 1945 until 1956 he was based in London. The works shown comprise a wide range of subject matter that includes still life, landscape and portraiture many of which refer to the shapes, textures and light quality of the Cornish landscape. This is clearly apparent in works such as Mousehole : 1946 and The Blue Window : 1952. As Heron later reflected on this period, ‘The feeling of a sort of marriage of indoor and outdoor space, through the aperture of the window frame, itself roughly rectilinear and parallel to the picture surface, was really the main theme of all my paintings – or nearly all – between 1945 and 1955’. He increasingly came to emphasise the ‘exclusively pictorial experience’ as opposed to searching out meanings and symbols in his paintings. Colour for Heron was the indispensable means for rendering pictorial space. He wrote in 1958 ‘My main interest, in my painting, has always been in colour, space and light…and space in colour is the subject of my painting today to the exclusion of everything else’.

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