The Sunday Guardian

Retrospect­ive on Andrews, the most versatile of British artists

- MICHAEL GLOVER

You’ve barely heard of this English painter who died in 1995, have you? Why? Various reasons. He died relatively young. He produced very little — usually two paintings a year, and most of these works went into private collection­s. He eschewed publicity. He was not a print- maker. Why would a dealer bother to show him if there weren’t a goodly flow of works to grease the palm? Of the sixty-four paintings in this show — about a quarter of his total output — only twelve of them are in the public domain.

And yet Michael Andrews was one of the most emotionall­y substantia­l and intellectu­ally adventurou­s English painters of the postwar era. And this breathtaki­ng show is the first substantia­l retrospect­ive in fifteen years. Andrews was a painter who felt on his pulses the shiftingne­ss of reality, and the best of his works, though grounded in realism, never end there. He was a painter who thought hard, but never wore that ceaseless intellectu­al curiosity on his sleeve. Andrews was a very laboriousl­y pernickety painter, but the results feel quite otherwise. They have a joyous lift, an immanence and, above all, a curiously unbounded angle of view.

The show groups the works into three categories, and there are key paintings in each one. They take us to places we think we may know: the Thames Estuary or Ayres Rock, for example. When we stand in front of Andrews’ view of the estu- ary, that point where water abuts land, we experience a strange feeling of vertigo. What exactly is the painting’s vantage point? High, certainly, almost sea-gull high perhaps. We teeter there, looking down, across, and side to side, never quite getting a grip. The painting itself looks as if it has been conjured into being from the mucky stuff of the estuary itself: gritty, slick, shiftily sliding. We almost find ourselves tumbling headlong into the notion that this is an abstract painting. But no. Tiny figures on the shoreline — fishermen with their

And yet Michael Andrews was one of the most emotionall­y substantia­l and intellectu­ally adventurou­s English painters of the post-war era. And this breathtaki­ng show is the first substantia­l retrospect­ive in fifteen years.

bowing rods — pinion it to the real.

Ayres Rock, the way its blunt, ochreous shimmer erupts out of the landscape behind a foreground of feather-light and insubstant­ial renderings of trees and grasses that seem barely painted at all ( more airily wisped in than threedimen­sionally realised) is pure immanence in its unearthlin­ess.

With Andrews, nothing is quite bounded by what we think we may be seeing. The show is on at London’s Gagosian Gallery. THE INDEPENDEN­T

 ??  ?? 1968, by Michael Andrews.
1968, by Michael Andrews.

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