Prunella Clough's Unconsidered Wastelands reconsidered at Osborne Samuel
This article originally appeared on Culture24.
Prunella Clough's journey through England's wastelands is explored at Osborne Samuel
Deserted Gravel Pit , c.1946 Pigeon-holing Prunella Clough (1919 -1999) has always been difficult. The English painter born in Chelsea as Cara Clough Taylor was famously reticent to talk about her work, which progressed from wartime coastal landscape studies through purely abstract works to discerning canvasses that incorporated found objects.
She claimed to have “never painted an abstract painting in her life” and was for a time closely associated with the neo-Romantic painters of the 1930s and 1940s, but her landscapes were always at odds with the mystical evocations of Samuel Palmer explored by Paul Nash, Keith Vaughan and Graham Sutherland.
Yet there are certainly stylistic traces – particularly with the earthy figurative landscapes of Vaughan – but Clough’s interest in gasworks, coke yards, chemical works and the people who toiled in them offered a peculiarly industrial take on their vision English Arcadia.
And rather than the sort of picturesque dilapidation that can be traced from Cozens and Constable to Piper and Nash, Clough’s subject matter actually puts her closer to someone like LS Lowry.
“Her Arcadia was the industrial urban landscape,” says Gordon Samuel, whose Mayfair gallery, Osborne Samuel, is about to present Unconsidered Wastelands, a show of over 70 of her paintings and works on paper.
“The landscape was the basis of what she began with," he says, "especially with her paintings of beaches just after the war, which were a bit like John Tunnard. But it wasn’t the beauty of the beach, it was the corrugated metal and the barbed wire, which was there as part of wartime security.
“She was seeing beauty in things that other people walked past. But I’m not sure you can really call her neo-Romantic - it’s something different. Is it some sort of metaphor of the re-emergence of industry in the post war years, of rising from decay? I’m not sure.”
Manhole II, 1952 Samuel has pulled together some classic and rarely seen Cloughs from the post war years that may help you answer this question. They include
Lorry with
Ladder (1952),
Woman in Biscuit Factory (1953),
Barrels in a Yard
(1954),
Woman Minding Machine (1953) and several others with similarly
prosaic titles that offer little clue to the elegance and tension they
contain.
“I could never get her to talk about it,” adds
Samuel, who first met Clough when he was a young gallery assistant at
Redfern Gallery in the 1970s. “Gerard (Hastings) knew her quite well
and he couldn’t get her to talk about it either - and she was a very
social woman, she wasn’t quiet, she would chat.”
Clough’s
privileged background was also a source of reticence. “She came from
this rather aristocratic Anglo-Irish background, but she was very
egalitarian,” says Samuel. “Sometimes she would write to all of her
mates and say, 'I’m having a sale in my studio, come along' - you would
go along and she would sell you three works on paper for a hundred
quid.”
“Whenever I saw her (she would come into the West End for a
little mooch around) she was dressed in sweater and
trousers with paint on them. I was just a young gallery assistant at Redfern and
she never looked down, or was condescending or patronising; she gave
you time.”
Clough's artistic journey began at Chelsea School of Art where her tutors
included Henry Moore, Robert Medley and Ceri Richards. After her
commitments during World War Two, when she worked as a cartographer in
the American Office of War Information, she attended Camberwell School
of Art.
From here the changing aesthetic of her work gradually
shifted from the sparse urban and industrial landscapes and subjects of
the 1950s and 1960s (at this time she deigned to describe herself as a
landscape painter) to experiments with what might be termed purer abstraction.
Cord 2, 1995 In
later years she became a magpie-like collector of objets trouve and was
famous for her rummaging expeditions in local skips for objects that
would clutter her Fulham studio and sometimes make their way into her
paintings.
“She would go with Martin Ireland, who was one of her
students, to Battersea when the tide was out and forage for found
objects that she would take back to her studio in Fulham” says Samuel.
“It could be a piece of mesh that she saw something in and she would
store it and use it sometime - put it on the canvas and paint through
it.
“She did the same in North End Road, in the little trinket
shops, buying things that you and I would think is awful stuff. She’d
find some kind of beauty in it.”
This sense of mysterious beauty
is evident in some of the later paintings on show, like
Cord I (1995),
which is a great slab of red oil and sand with a discarded piece
of cord at its bottom, and
Fancy Goods Two (1992), which weaves magic
out of some her North End Road trinket finds.
But it is the
landscapes from the 1960s that hover between these periods with their
widened colour palette that offer tantalising clues to how her work
progressed.
Since her death in 1999, aged 80, (the same year
that she was awarded the Jerwood Prize), she has been more widely
recognised; a major retrospective at Tate Britain in 2007 brought
her works to a wider audience, but this Bruton Street selling exhibition is a
welcome opportunity to remind ourselves of her elusive appeal.
“I’ve been involved in
buying and selling Clough’s for all of my working life,” says Samuel,
“but the market is erratic. It’s rather like Keith Vaughan, there is a
very strong following for her work, and I think we will get a very
strong turn-out.
“Of course I want to sell, we’ve got an
enormous rent to pay, but I want the scholarship to dominate and I think
that sets the scene for the quality.”
- Prunella Clough: Unconsidered Wastelands is at Osborne Samuel, 23a Bruton Street, London from April 17 until May 16 2015. See www.osbornesamuel.com for more information.
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Source: http://www.culture24.org.uk/art/painting-and-drawing/art523325