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13 December 2008—12 January 2009
Remembering Albert Herbert (1925-2008)
Selected works in the exhibition can be seen on the Artist's page > |  Into the Sea, 1995
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THIS
EXHIBITION celebrates the life of Albert Herbert who died in May
this year. For more than five decades, Herbert consistently painted
dream-like images that were the product of an unusual and highly
individual imagination—his poetic vision continued the metaphysical
tradition in British art that extends from William Blake to Cecil
Collins. Herbert’s idiosyncratic, mystical paintings used Biblical
stories and religious subjects, although they were not exclusively
Christian in their meaning—religion was his way of revealing ‘the inner
world of the collective mind’. Herbert discovered images from universal
narratives depicted by artists for thousands of years, and renewed them
in a quintessentially modern way.
Born in 1925, Herbert studied
at the Royal College of Art in the late 1940s and early 1950s alongside
John Bratby, Edward Middleditch, Jack Smith and Derrick Greaves, a
group known as the ‘Kitchen Sink’ painters. Herbert was less interested
in the prevailing social realism, and was more attracted to the truth
and emotional significance he found in the paintings of Francis Bacon,
whom he met when Bacon was working in a studio at the RCA. Herbert
instinctively wanted to make figurative, emotive, symbolic paintings,
and his paintings became increasingly introspective, more about states
of mind than about the external world around him.
In the late
1950s Herbert had been drawn towards religion, and when years later he
visited a Zen monastery in South Korea in 1976, his sympathy for
Christian symbolism was re-awoken as he realized that his roots were in
the West. He decided to use Biblical and theological subjects as a way
of making his paintings less private. He usually started a painting
with ‘some idea that could be put into words’, although he also
believed that ‘art is not about meanings but feelings’. The surface
meanings of his works were often a mask for something else: metaphors,
symbols or archetypes which could be interpreted in several different
ways.
When Herbert was Principal Lecturer at St Martin’s School of Art in the 1960s and ’70s,
it was a centre for the avant garde and he gave up painting in a
representational way, repressing his drive to make images that tell
stories. Finding abstraction too restrictive, he eventually found a way
back to figurative painting through looking at children’s art and
making primitive, illustrative, figurative etchings, working on them
intensively over a ten-year period in the basement of St Martin’s. When
he began to paint again, he retained the habit of ‘working small’ from
making prints.
The first of these new paintings had an almost
savage primitivism, but they gradually became increasingly colourful
and enigmatic, often without direct Biblical imagery. Herbert did not
intend specific readings of his paintings, although he visited some
subjects repeatedly: Moses Climbs the Mountain of God, God Speaks to
Moses from the Burning Bush, the Nativity, Jonah and the Whale. Over
the last two decades of his life, free to paint full time, Herbert
constantly renewed and re-invented himself as he explored his inner
world. He exhibited regularly with England & Co, culminating in a
major retrospective exhibition in 2004.
The
exhibition will include paintings, works on paper and etchings by
Albert Herbert, and will be accompanied by a mixed exhibition of works
by Gallery artists including Georgia Russell, Chris Kenny and Alberto
Duman in the Lower Gallery.
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