The Asian Age

An exhilarati­ng dance of colours

Heron insisted that looking at a painting was an active, not a passive thing. Your eye must circle, sweep, jump. His colours dance, pulse and boff you on the nose. His exhilarati­ng joy in colour is catching. The painting that had a greater influence on hi

- Laura Freeman By arrangemen­t with the Spectator

Patrick Heron’s paintings of the 1950s melt like ice creams. You want to run your tongue along the canvas and catch the drips. They capture a sense of summer holiday sea- and- scampi fr eedom. When Heron ( 1920– 99) was five, his father, a blouse and silk- scarf manufactur­er, moved from Leeds to St Ives in Cornwall.

Heron played with the children of the potter Bernard Leach, and with Peter Lanyon, a friend from Sunnycroft primary school and a future painter, founded the Golden Harp Club, a society for the preservati­on of culture in England.

After the Slade School of Fine Art in London, Heron returned to St Ives in 1944 on an “approved placement” for conscienti­ous objectors at the Leach Pottery.

He met Ben Nicholson, Barbara Hepworth and Naum Gabo. In 1956, he settled with his wife Delia at Eagle’s Nest in Zennor, a gorseandwi­ldflower walk from St Ives. He talked of the garden “vibrating with camellias and azaleas” in the summer.

He remembered the “extraordin­ary effervesce­nce” of flowers “erupting all over the garden”. Azalea Garden: May 1956 in Tate St Ives’s permanent collection, is a hotly shimmering curtain- raiser to the gallery’s Patrick Heron retrospect­ive. Stop and sun your face against it on your way in.

Heron insisted that looking at a painting was an active, not a passive thing. Your eye must circle, sweep, jump. His colours dance, pulse and boff you on the nose. His exhilarati­ng joy in colour is catching.

The painting that had a greater influence on his work than any other was Henri Matisse’s The Red Studio ( 1911), which Heron visited repeatedly when it was shown at the Redfern Gallery in London in 1944.

He was fascinated by Matisse’s planes of unmixed colours, which, with a sleight of hand and brush, give the illusion of depth. He coined a term ‘ unflatness’ to do justice to colours that push and pull.

His titles revel in colour: Green and Mauve Horizontal­s: January 1958; Violet in Dull Green: July 1959; Big Complex Diagonal with Emeralds and Reds: March 1972 — September 1974; Vermillion and Ultramarin­e: June 11: 1985.

Being an old stick- in- the- mud, I have put those paintings in chronologi­cal order. The exhibition does not. Heron’s work over 50 years is organised into four gnomic, nonsense- rhyme themes “Asymmetry and Recomplica­tion”; “Explicit Space”; “Edges”; “Unity of the Work”.

This makes for an exhibition that is infuriatin­g rather than illuminati­ng and that does a disservice to the richness of Heron’s work. It seems particular­ly perverse when Heron was so precise about dating his paintings in their titles.

Not every exhibition need follow a dogged timeline — Edward Bawden at Dulwich Picture Gallery confidentl­y, wittily, organises itself into themes — but in a life’s survey such as this, where certain paintings so obviously belong together — one fellow visitor walked from room to room, muttering “so this goes with that, and that one with this one” — it is a block to understand­ing.

The words “dis- chronology’ and ‘ a- chronology” — Tate aren’t the only culprits — should be banned.

Paintings from different decades are jelly- jumbled together like coloured Haribo, M& Ms and Liquorice Allsorts. If you have a tidy, logical mind you want to pick them out and put them in their proper groups.

Since you cannot start taking paintings off the wall of the light and subtly sympatheti­c Jamie Fobert Architects extension, which for the first time gives Tate St Ives the space it needs for Heron’s largest canvases such as Christmas Eve: 1951, a scene of messy bustle and expectancy — you must draw the links and plot the periods yourself.

One other groan: the dimensions of each painting are given in the catalogue in centimetre­s. Does 182.9 x 304.8 give you any sense of the scale of a painting like Christmas Eve: 1951? Wouldn’t 6ft x 10ft and 6.5ft x 13ft ( in brackets) be more helpful?

Heron talked of the edges of a painting as a ‘ springboar­d’. Why should any part of a painting be more important that any other? The margins were no less vital than the centre.

His amorphous shapes, his bitsandblo­bs drift to the boundaries of the canvas, like balloons let go after a party.

You want so much to know where they are floating, what is happening in the wings of the picture plane, noises off. Heron rebelled against paintings whose background­s had a “left- over look”.

It is what makes his most successful paintings so exciting, like sugar- rush shots of freshly squeezed orange juice. Colours collide: traffic light reds and greens, oranges and lemons, aubergines against deep blue seas.

 ??  ?? Astonishin­g splashes of colour: Square Green with Orange, Violet and Lemon, 1969, by Patrick Heron
Astonishin­g splashes of colour: Square Green with Orange, Violet and Lemon, 1969, by Patrick Heron

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India