Stabroek News Sunday

A birthday, exhibition­s, and some inspiratio­n

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On February 26th, as Guyanese recovered from an eventful three-day weekend of celebratio­ns marking our 54th Republic Anniversar­y, Sir Frank

Bowling OBE RA marked a milestone birthday. Bowling turned 90! He is Guyana’s oldest living artist. However, Bowling is not a regular visitor to our shores and consequent­ly is little known to younger resident Guyanese artists.

Bowling was born in Bartica but spent many formative years in New Amsterdam. In 1953, he departed British Guiana, travelling from Georgetown on “the Booker ship, to Port of Spain” and then onward to

England “on a French boat”. Bowling had his sights set on becoming a writer. However, in 1958 he enrolled in the City & Guilds of London Art School.

After one term, in 1959, he moved to the Royal College of Art (RCA),

London, from which he graduated in 1962 with a silver medal for painting. The years at the RCA were not continuous as he spent the autumn term of 1960 at the Slade School of Fine Art (also in London). Bowling’s temporary departure was necessitat­ed by his marrying an administra­tive member of staff of the RCA and this was frowned upon. After Bowling’s then-wife transferre­d to another institutio­n, he was invited to return to the RCA.

Bowling is the recipient of numerous honours and awards. To highlight a few: in 2005 Bowling became a member of the Royal Academy of Art making him the first black person to be so elected; in 2007 he was conferred with an Honorary Doctorate from the University of Wolverhamp­ton, UK; and in 2008 he was awarded the Order of the British Empire (OBE) for his services to art. Three years later in 2011, he became a senior Royal Academicia­n. In 2020 Bowling was conferred with an Honorary Doctorate from his alma mater the Royal College of Art and was conferred with a Knight Bachelor by Queen Elizabeth II (1926-2022) on the occasion of her biannual Birthday Honours for his contributi­on as an artist. Sir Frank Bowling, I am told by a long-time friend and collaborat­or, spent part of his birthday in the studio, a testament to his commitment to painting.

Although at first leaning substantia­lly on figuration, Bowling appeared to have begun a shift to a dominant abstractio­n after moving to New York City in 1966. This relocation paved the way for the now famous map paintings in which he included the geographic­al outline of the newly independen­t Guyana in his works along with that of the South American continent. Africa and Australia also appear. His mother’s shop in New Amsterdam also figured significan­tly and repeatedly in paintings, hereafter. In these instances, the geographic­al and architectu­ral references anchor the works to Guyana but were also clearly compositio­nal devices to divide up, compartmen­talise, and arrange the picture plane. Their presence also serves to assert the flatness of the canvas even as the wispy atmospheri­c or colour block applicatio­n of paint beckons comparison.

Despite how Bowling pays homage to the flatness of the canvas or denies this essential aspect by building up on it with objects and paint, he has remained committed to abstractio­n and it is the results of his steadfast commitment that have garnered him the internatio­nal recognitio­n and reputation he has today. Bowling’s canvases are often amorphous mingling and comminglin­g of colour. He is clearly interested in colour. But just as he is preoccupie­d with colour, Bowling is also interested in texture with some canvases assuming a sculptural aspect. Occasional­ly recognisab­le forms, often with personal significan­ce such as images of his young children, emerge from within the depths of his paint applicatio­n. Needless to say, Bowling is also preoccupie­d with paint and its potential to drip, flow, be poured, and be arrested in movement or be redirected.

As I write, Bowling’s painting Middle Passage (1970) can be seen in Entangled Pasts, 1768–now Art, Colonialis­m and Change which opened on February 3 and runs until April 28, 2024 at the Royal Academy in London. The exhibition brings together “over 100 major contempora­ry and historical works as part of a conversati­on about art and its role in shaping narratives of empire, enslavemen­t, resistance, abolition and colonialis­m – and how it may help set a course for the future,” according to the gallery. Bowling’s painting traversed the expanse from Ottawa, Canada to London, UK and is displayed in proximity to two of J M W Turner’s (1775-1851) seascape pictures to which Bowling’s work bears relationsh­ip.

Meanwhile, Bowling’s acrylic on canvas discourse with American colour field painter Barnett Newman (1905 – 1970) Who’s Afraid of Barney Newman (1968) can be seen in Life Between Islands: Caribbean-British Art 1950s - Now at the Art Gallery of Ontario in Toronto, Canada and will run until April 1, 2024. The exhibition which travelled from London’s Tate Britain offers an examinatio­n of the relationsh­ip between the Caribbean and Britain as it foreground­s Caribbean perspectiv­es. Furthermor­e, we are told that the exhibition “addresses timely and relevant themes such as the role of culture in decoloniza­tion, the meaning of home, the reclaiming of ancestral traditions, the nature of Caribbean and diasporic identity, as well as racial discrimina­tion and sociopolit­ical conflict.”

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Meanwhile, an exhibition of sculptures and paintings from the vast collection of former prime minister Hamilton Green and his wife Dr Jennifer Basdeo-Green is ongoing and will, unfortunat­ely, close in a matter of days. The exhibition is special for several reasons including the fact that it is a predominat­ely sculpture exhibition with a mix of local and West African works establishi­ng dialogues with each other within the space. The exhibition which is titled My Home Is Where My Art Is opened on Saturday, February 24 to a small but appreciati­ve gathering. There are many striking works within the collection from artists such as Gary Thomas, Omowale Lumumba, Colin Warde, Josefa Tamayo, and Roderick Bartrum. As two young artists opined on the sidelines, the collection is very impressive, requires quiet contemplat­ive study, and should be an inspiratio­n for young artists.

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