The Independent

A restless showcase for the father of British Pop Art

‘Respective’ signals Richard Hamilton’s debt to modernism and Duchamp in particular, writes Aindrea Emelife

- Pallant House Gallery

Pop Art, as Richard Hamilton fashioned it, was once the “now” to modernism’s “then” – but walk through Pallant House Gallery’s exhibition Respective, and it is clear how the visceral newness of modernism titans such as Duchamp influenced Pop Art’s Hamilton.

Hamilton arranged Duchamp’s first British retrospect­ive at the Tate in 1966. Holding the artist in high regard, Hamilton was drawn to Duchamp’s decided disregard for the orders of high and low art, and for his twists and play with words. One could argue that Hamilton admired Duchamp’s heterogene­ity, and sought to push this further with his exploratio­n of drawing, painting, photograph, sound, installati­on and digital print. Hamilton’s early abstract works rarely rouse visual prompts, as his more bombastic images dominate our visual lexicon. To this end, “Respective”, an intricate oil painting that gives the exhibition its title, offers insight into Hamilton’s interest in visual perception and the fundamenta­ls of perspectiv­e.

Hamilton writes: “My paintings at this time were abstract [and] demonstrat­e one clear preoccupat­ion – the use of minimal elements to articulate the picture surface.” It is back-to-basics bare canvas and simple marks, urging us – and him – to consider our relationsh­ips between these marks and as a whole. This idea is developed later in “Hers Is A Lush Situation” (1958), when Hamilton had begun his investigat­ions into his own self-styling of Pop Art. Here, he posits the relationsh­ip between woman and machine, as detailed in three interwoven elements: the girl in the car with a Sophia Loren pout; the car vrooming in motion; and the hyper-detailed urban landscape of New York.

Mick Jagger handcuffed after a party at Keith Richards’ Sussex home encapsulat­es an era of fascinatio­n with celebrity scandal that spawned a series of paintings and screenprin­ts

Of particular enjoyment is “Swingeing London”. Hamilton thought that Pop Art should be popular, sexy, big business. He was fascinated by the modern world. Mick Jagger handcuffed after a party at Keith Richards’ Sussex home encapsulat­es an era of fascinatio­n with celebrity scandal that spawned a series of paintings and screenprin­ts. Fuzzy, hazy, periwinkle-green-jacketed Jagger is repeated in etching, screenprin­t and lithograph. Newspaper cuttings mark the inception of Hamilton’s collage work and in this instance, “Swingeing London” is laid out like a page of newsprint, with a banner headline: “STONES: ‘A STRONG SWEET SMELL OF INCENSE’”, a reference to the incense that the police noted when they raided the house.

It is difficult to contest the triumph of “Oculist Witnesses”, a 1968 collaborat­ive effort between Duchamp and Hamilton. It reminds me of “The Large Glass”, part of the Tate collection, which is one such excellent example of Hamilton’s preoccupat­ion with Duchamp. Drawing further links with the polemic work, in this exhibition, through the publicatio­n “The Bride Stripped Bare by Her Bachelors Even Again” (1966), we discover the process of Hamilton creating a reconstruc­tion of Marcel Duchamp’s “Large Glass”.

The exhibition is restless at times – Hamilton does many things, luckily most of them well. There are enough of the favourites, as well as works to consider Hamilton anew.

‘Respective’ is at Pallant House Gallery until 18 April

 ?? (Richard Hamilton) ?? ‘Adonis in Y Fronts’, screenprin­t, 1963
(Richard Hamilton) ‘Adonis in Y Fronts’, screenprin­t, 1963

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