Picture the scene if you will: storm tossed seas pounding
the shingle beach, spray hanging so thick in the air you could be in the middle
of a blizzard, lightening piercing the maelstrom and wind howling demonically
around your body, chilling you to the bone. A pleasant picture no? Even the
thought of it is making me curl deeper into my cashmere… Brrr!
Now I love a potter into the great outdoors as much as the next girl, in fact I really do enjoy tootling around amidst nature in all her storm whipped splendour, when the wind steals your breath before you can even draw it and being drenched is just par for the course. Even intrepid little me might quail slightly about getting so up close and personal to a storm on the beach though, especially when I was blatantly the tallest and most electrically conductive thing around… Luckily for us though, there are people who are so passionate about capturing the true nature of a storm that they’ll throw caution to the wind (pardon the pun) and just straight in. Joan Eardley was one of these adventurous souls and her Landscape works are a tribute to the combination of passion of a woman and the power of Nature.
The Wave, 1961. Oil and Grit on Board. Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art, Edinburgh. |
Last December I was cast adrift in Eardley’s urban landscape
of the Glasgow Gorbals, with her children and their poverty as my company. In
the same afternoon I was swept away yet again, but this time it was to the wide
and wild expanses of the Scottish country around Catterline to the south of
Aberdeen. Now in my memory the whole span of that time is rather rose-tinted
and gooey (read cringing for everyone
else) so I was quite prepared to put my reaction to the work down to romantic
fancy, but even now, some six months later I’m still enthralled by the
combination of power and passion which characterise this Landscape work. It is
just as strong as the Figurative but concentrates more on the fleeting nature
of great untouched landscapes, rather than the transitory nature and
impressions of the humanity Eardley surrounded herself with, and which some
find it easier to associate with.
Summer Fields, c.1961. Oil and Grasses on Board. Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art. |
Eardley always painted with an eye for detail. She had a
talent for immersing herself in the world that she was capturing, and taking
the viewer along with her, saturating us all in her style, her love of colour
and her passion for what she saw. She also had a knack for capturing a moment
in time to perfection – something which has only truly been recognised with the
fifty or so years of hindsight we have accrued since her death. The urban and
country landscapes that she immortalised represented a way of life which was
slowly and irrevocably disappearing. If we look at her images painted in and
around the tiny village of Catterline during the 1950’s and 60’s, they show a
way of life no longer seen in the modern world. Whilst there are indications of
humanity in the houses and fishing nets and beehives, there is nothing that
suggests modernity and the encroachment of technological advancements. Indeed,
whilst the world at that time was seemingly swept up by a storm of new freedom,
consumerism and social bonhomie, Eardley was known to race north at the ring of
a phone to capture a storm of the natural variety in all its uncaring, inhuman
and timeless glory. She knew her landscapes were slowly disappearing around her,
she took it upon herself to capture every subtlety in colour throughout the
season, every grade of the light along the shore, safe in the knowledge that it
was but a fleeting second to be cherished.
Beehives, Approaching Storm, c.1950's. Oil on Board. By Kind Permission of the Royal Bank of Scotland, Edinburgh. |
There are those who would contest that the Landscape images
are nowhere near as alive as those of the Glasgow street children, I personally
would argue that they are just as full of vim and vigour, just wholly more
understated in the execution. The best (and most modern) comparison I can make would
be to liken R&B to Soul music – they come from the same place in the music
culture, it is just the way in which we interpret them and which moves us the
most that determines our favourite. Indeed, I can honestly say that the
Landscapes are my personal favourites because there is just so much going on
within each composition in terms of subject and the way in which each has been
lovingly constructed. There is something of the American and European post-war
abstract scene echoing through the works Eardley produced during the mid-late 1950’s.
It is in her physical interaction with her medium and in her experimentation
with adding grass and flowers to her canvas to build texture and bring a
greater sense of place to the images which I particularly enjoy. She has spread
paint on with a palette knife in some instances, drawn into the wet paint with
her brush end and dribbled wet pain down her foregrounds.
There is an eloquence to every image in Eardley’s landscape
portfolio which even the most verbose and flowery travel writer would struggle
to replicate in describing the magnificent wastes, epic skies and the
transition of the light in the coastal village which Eardley came to see as her
second home. I find it staggering that I can smell the grasses, hear the crunch
of fresh snow under foot and almost taste the salty tang in the air. After her untimely
death at the age of just forty-two, one of Eardley’s tutors from her days at
Glasgow School of Art, Hugh Adam Crawford, spoke movingly of her great artistic
talent, and made what I consider to be a very telling remark about this woman
and her work. Paraphrasing (as is my want) he intimated that she communicated
with paint, she knew it’s language and what it could convey to a viewer and
most importantly she knew how to do it. Eardley had few close friends, and she
was known to be difficult and almost cold to those who she didn’t know. Give
her a paint brush though and the feelings flow freely – love, loss, happiness,
naivety, sadness… Life immemorial is Eardley’s beautifully painted gift to us
all, more articulate and honest than words ever could be.
Catterline in Winter, c.1963. Oil on Board. Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art, Edinburgh. |
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