Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
END JOHN BYRNE DEAD ‘If I could draw like John Byrne I would give up acting ... and, if I could write like him, I’d hide my paintbrushes!’ ROBBIE COLTRANE END JOHN BYRNE DEAD Bourne Fine Art Part of The Fine Art Society Edinburgh Festival 2014 INTRODUCTION John Byrne’s art poses dynamic puzzles: his pictures invite the viewer to look for narrative or verbal interpretation, but they refuse to be conclusive – even the artist won’t be drawn on what they mean. As Jean Cocteau once put it, ‘An artist cannot speak about his art any more than a plant can discuss horticulture’. When Byrne describes his work, he doesn’t explain it; rather, it leads him to tell personal anecdotes, or even to express surprise – mirroring the viewers own puzzlement – about what a character is doing, or why an object is present. He doesn’t analyse the process, either of painting or of making meaning. Fellow Paisley alumni, sculptor Sandy Stoddart, says that to think too hard is not the business of art or creativity; instead, the image should appear formed in the mind’s eye – which is as far as Byrne is ever likely to describe how a composition or subject has come to him. Nevertheless, threaded through his work is an extensive iconography that has developed over 50 years and which reveals a coherent thematic development. It may not reveal analytical meaning, but there is an insight into the artist’s inner workings amounting, in some cases, to a kind of pictorial autobiography. His pictures of 1950s Ferguslie Park – Feegie, as it is known locally – capture what was once a new invention, the ‘teenager’, as this strange new being emerged in the artist’s own youth: both the physical environment and his Smoking Beach Boy (triptych), 2007 Oil on board · 48 x 108¼ inches Royal Scottish Academy, Edinburgh (Diploma Collection) Diploma Work deposit, 2007 {7} internal landscape. In his so-called ‘Underwood Lane’ series, the Teddy Boys who loiter – some idle, others with intent – are reminiscences of his own past. Dead End takes its title from the film showing at the Astoria cinema, featured in the picture John’s work in the past but this ‘sporting’ element has been upended. Where once the hunter was an alpha male, brimming with menace, here nature has turned on him. In some pictures, such as The Huntsman and the Snowy Owl, crea- and known locally as the ‘Bug Hut’. A 1937 crime drama featuring Humphrey Bogart sets the opulent lives of the rich against what were then the slums of east-side Manhattan. It follows the Dead End Kids, a petty gang of street urchins on a path to a life of crime. The parallels aren’t hard to see. Byrne’s incredibly complex masterpiece of Paisley nightlife seethes with activity. All the action – bar the man roaring on top of the roof of a Riley – takes place in alleys, dark corners and roof tops, peopled like vermin. Graffiti proliferates and shadows are cast, long and spindly. John is equally revered as screen writer and artist and the presentation of the Underwood Lane pictures reference filmic and theatrical worlds, their backdrops lit like stage-sets. This exhibition takes its title from the picture of the same name and pursues largely nocturnal themes: moonlit woods occasionally populated with a lone hunter; the streets of 1950s Paisley; the self examining artist, alone and wreathed in cigarette smoke. The moonlit woods and the hunter are a counterbalance to Underwood Lane, where the pernicious teddy boys are the aggressors: the hunters are as likely to be the hunted. The huntsman has made appearances in tures spectate with a subtly comic effect. Either that, or the menace is coming from within, from the subconscious. These lunar landscapes resonate with highly pitched emotion, bordering on ecstasy. John has often referenced aspects of his Catholic upbringing – and he does so again in the marvellously titled Discovery of the Missing Benedictine Monk Outside Paisley Museum by P. McC. on a Winter's Night in 1957. Though these pictures couldn’t be described as overt representations of Catholicism, they embody something of its baroque imagery and transcendental impulse. John’s graphic sensibility is there in the tightly wrought, leafless trees, set in silhouette against a full moon. Cowering huntsmen seem to genuflect at a vision which is not so remote from the ascension – replete with trees like a crown of thorns and celestial light. The huntsman’s confrontation with his quarry is as unnerving as Byrne’s self portraits. Driven less by narcissism than the problem of the elusive self, he has long continued to examine his own physiognomy. Using the vernacular of our time, the super-sized Big Selfie shows the artist staring out through red rimmed, sleep-deprived eyes. Smoke envelops him. There is {8} {9} NOT THE INTRODUCTION physical truth and sometimes caricature in his self portraits, but what he sees looking back at him we, the viewer, are never given to understand. Nor perhaps is the artist. The face has become mask-like by dint of our familiarity with his finelycultivated hirsute visage, crooked nose and hooded eyes. But this intimacy only serves to distract us from what is really staring back. This exhibition coincides with a major retrospective, Sitting Ducks, at the Scottish National Portrait Gallery, Edinburgh. It concentrates on Byrnes portraits of his family, of celebrities, or of actors and performers in character. They are individuals and types we identify with or those who, through the media and TV , have come into our homes and with whom we make a misplaced connection. By contrast, Dead End is a result of the artist’s introspection, producing something personal to Byrne: a vision of the outsider, at once Everyman and his own self. Emily Walsh Director, Bourne Fine Art I am hugely disappointed that I just won’t have time to produce a piece on the genius of John Byrne. I am honoured that he put my name forward – and with enough time would have loved to have written a piece that talks not just about his brilliance but also his originality in this jaded world of conceptual art, which is in evidence at the myriad contemporary art fairs that I have to attend. I would also have dwelt upon the John as a dandiacal painter in the great tradition of Whistler and his peers – as the dandy and the artist promenade arm in arm. Both are outsiders and subversives, who gaze with ironical detachment upon the subfusc tapestry of life, as John once said to me: ‘I was already drawing constantly by the age of seven and I do see a real connection with dress. At about that age, I saw a photo of an artist with a beret and cloak, who lived in Paris. He had a goatee beard and from that moment I always wanted a beard. I grew my first one – under the chin – when a student in 1958 at the Glasgow School of Art.’ And true to his vocation, Byrne blew his student grant each term on buying shantung shirts at the outfitters, Esquire, which he says, ‘were the perfect expression of Transatlantic Glasgow’. After a lifelong pursuit of dandyism, John recently admitted to me: ‘My style has all just come together. Originally, I walked down the street with a sense of bravado, but now I have the self-confidence to dress how I please. I was hidden for long enough – I’m a much more odd person now than I ever was before. It’s grand. I’ve come into my own’. And the pictures in this exhibition are testament to that. James Knox Managing Director, The Art Newspaper { 10 } { 11 } 1 BLACK GUY IN FEDORA Signed · oil on board · 34½ x 30¼ inches 2 CONCH Signed · oil on board · 23¼ x 18½ inches 3 DEAD END Signed, inscribed with title verso watercolour · 32 x 42 inches 4 DEATH OF AN EGGHEAD Signed · casein on paper · 44 x 33 inches 5 ELVIS AND THE SPACE SPOOK 6 ‘GOOD SHOT!’ Signed · oil on board· 15 x 11 inches Signed · oil on board · 17¼ x 12¾ inches 7 GRAY’S ANATOMY Oil on board · 26 x 18 inches 8 THE LINNET Signed · oil on board · 18 x 16 inches 9 TREE LIFE Signed · oil on board · 14 x 10¼ inches 10 TREE, CLOUD, HEDGE Signed · oil on board · 24 x 18 inches 11 WEST END SERENADE Signed and inscribed with title Hand-coloured lithograph · edition of ten 30 x 22 inches 12 MOON, SWAN, MARKSMAN Signed · oil on board · 31 x 26 inches 13 THE DISCOVERY OF THE MISSING BENEDICTINE MONK OUTSIDE PAISLEY MUSEUM BY P.McC. ON A WINTER’S NIGHT IN 1957 Signed and inscribed ‘Lost & Hungry’ · oil on board · 30½ x 25 inches 14 MOONLIGHT SONATA Signed · oil and casein on board · 30 x 22½ inches 15 ‘OH, LOOK … A DINKY’ Signed · oil on board · 18 x 23½ inches 16 O, MY LOVE Signed · oil on Formica board · 28 x 17½ inches 17 SHADOW OF A GUNMAN Signed · oil on board · 49½ x 30 inches 18 THE HUNTSMAN AND THE SNOWY OWL Signed, inscribed with title verso · casein on paper · 44 x 33½ inches 19 ALL HALLOW’S EVE Signed · oil on Formica · 19½ x 21¼ inches 20 ANGST Signed · oil on board · 24½ x 17½ inches 21 LA BÊTE ROUGE Signed · oil on board · 29½ x 22½ inches 22 BIG SELFIE Signed · casein on paper · 28½ x 37¾ inches JOHN BYRNE CHRONOLOGY 2014 Dead End, Bourne Fine Art, Edinburgh Sitting Ducks, Scottish National Portrait Gallery A new adaption of Uncle Varick opens at The Royal Lyceum, Edinburgh Marries Jeanine Davies 2013 A new mural is completed in the dome at The King’s Theatre, Edinburgh Bad Smoky Joe & The Dark Wildwoods, The Rendezvous Gallery, Aberdeen 2012 The Joyful Mysteries, The Fine Art Society, London The Slab Boys Movie Exhibition, Duncan R. Miller Fine Arts, Glasgow Me and Them – Self Portraits and Character Studies, Bourne Fine Art, Edinburgh 1997 Slab Boys, premiers at Edinburgh Film Festival 1987 Awarded an Honorary Doctorate from Gray’s School of Art, Aberdeen Byrne and Tilda Swinton have twins, Xavier and Honor 1985 2005 Adaption of The Government Inspector, Almeida, London Dead and Alive, The Fine Art Society, London 2004 An adaption of Chekhov’s Uncle Varick opens at The Royal Lyceum, Edinburgh House for an Art Lover, Glasgow 2010 New version of Chekhov's The Cherry Orchard, Royal Lyceum, Edinburgh 2009 2001 (Byrne later returned it in protest against the war against Iraq) 2008 2000 Nova Scotia, The Traverse Theatre, Edinburgh Post Office issues Byrne designed 20-pence millennium stamp John Byrne, Moray Art Centre Byrne@60: The Unsolved Artist, Paisley Museum and Galleries 2007 BBC 2 transmits Boswell and Johnson’s 1983 The Slab Boys, The Playhouse Theatre, New York 1982 Still Life, The Traverse Theatre, Edinburgh 1980 Colquhoun and MacBryde, Royal Court, London Becomes Writer-in-Residence, Duncan of Jordanstone School of Art, Dundee 1991 1979 Returns to exhibiting and begins an intense period of work at Glasgow Print Studio Your Cheatin’ Heart, William Hardie Gallery, Glasgow Patrick’s Day, Portal Gallery, London 2006 Flotsam and Jetsam, Art.TM Gallery, Inverness Hankies, William Hardie Gallery, Glasgow Settles in Tain Becomes Associate Director and designer at Leicester Haymarket Theatre Moves to London New Editions, Glasgow Print Studio His Majesty’s Theatre, Aberdeen Writes episode of Crown Court Hooray for Hollywood, Louisville, Kentucky 1999 1998 Designs Peter Arnott’s White Rose at The Traverse Theatre, Edinburgh 1992 Becomes a full member at the Royal Scottish Academy A stage version of Tutti Frutti for the National Theatre of Scotland opens at Adaption of The London Cuckolds opens at Leicester Haymarket Theatre 1996 Tour of the Western Isles, written and directed by Byrne Cornerboys and Angels, Glasgow Print Studio Tutti Frutti transmitted 1984 1993 Awarded an MBE for services to literature and theatre written and directed by Byrne for BBC Arena Writes Tutti Frutti 2002 Recent works, Glasgow Print Studio BBC 2 transmits Byrne about Byrne, The Slab Boys, The Scottish Gallery, Edinburgh New Work, The Fine Art Society, London Directs film version of The Slab Boys in a A Life in Small Pictures, Bourne Fine Art, Glasgow warehouse 2011 Edinburgh 1995 Moonlight and Music, The Open Eye New Works, The Scottish Gallery, 2003 Gallery, Edinburgh Edinburgh Boogie-Woogie, The Rendezvous Gallery, Writes musical Underwood Lane 1994 Six Portraits of Scots Politicians, The Aberdeen La Terre Sauvage, Glasgow Print Studio National Portrait Gallery, Edinburgh Awarded an Honorary Doctorate from The University of Dundee 1988 Small Works – Portraits and Still Life, The Scottish Gallery, Edinburgh 1990 Your Cheatin Heart is transmitted on BBC 1 with Tilda Swinton as Cissie Crouch Normal Service, Hampstead Theatre Club, London The Loveliest Night of the Year (later called Cuttin’ a Rug), The Traverse Theatre, Edinburgh Becomes Writer-in-Residence, Borderline Theatre Co. Writes, directs and designs Dick Whittington for Borderline; writes Cara Coco for Radio Scotland 1978 The Slab Boys, The Traverse Theatre, Edinburgh, transferring to Royal Court, London, winning Evening Standard award for most promising playwright 1977 Stage version of Writer’s Cramp, Edinburgh Fringe, transferring to Bush Theatre, London and Mickery Theatre, Holland 1976 Radio version of Writer’s Cramp, BBC Scotland 1975 Exhibition at Clunes Gallery, Sydney Withdraws from exhibiting publicly until 1991 1974 Paints gable-end mural Boy on Dogback, Crawford Street, Glasgow 1973 Designs set for The Cheviot, the Stag and the Black, Black Oil for 7:84 Scotland 1967 Correspondence with Magritte, adopts Patrick persona and begins to exhibit at Portal Gallery, London 1966 Leaves Scottish TV , joins A.F.Stoddart as a carpet designer 1965 Daughter Celie born Exhibition at 208 Gallery, Glasgow Exhibition at Crestine Gallery, Edinburgh 1964 Marries Alice Simpson and son John Francis is born. Lives in Renfrew and becomes graphic designer for Scottish TV 1963 Graduates with Diploma in Drawing and Painting, wins Newbery Medal, Hutchison Prize for Drawing, awarded Bellahouston Scholarship to travel to Perugia 1962 Aitken Dott Gallery, Edinburgh Returns to Glasgow School of Art 1972 1961 Designs set for The Great Northern Welly Boot Show, King’s Theatre, Glasgow 1958 1971 Travels with family to Los Angeles to work on animated film with Donovan Leitch, An Old Fashioned Picture Book Exhibition at Rex Irwin Gallery, Sydney Nine Large Patrick Paintings, Portal Gallery, London 1968 Leaves A.F.Stoddart & Co, becomes a full-time painter Patrick at Portal, Portal Gallery, London Transfers to Edinburgh School of Art for one year Fails first year exams at Glasgow School of Art and has to resit 1957 Leaves school without taking Highers, gets job as ‘slab boy’ in local carpet factory A.F. Stoddart & Co 1940 Born in Paisley, second son of Patrick Byrne and Alice, née McShane Published by Bourne Fine Art for the exhibition John Byrne: Dead End held at 6 Dundas Street, Edinburgh, 4 July to 30 August 2014, in an edition of 750 copies. Fifty copies are bound in patterned paper boards with a signed lithograph by the artist. Catalogue © Bourne Fine Art Paintings © John Byrne Photography by Andy Phillipson Designed and typeset in Sentinel by Dalrymple Printed in Belgium by Albe De Coker Front cover: detail from Moonlight Sonata [cat.14] Back cover: Angst [cat.20] Inside covers: pattern paper designed by Sarah Nechamkin for the Curwen Press, c.1949 Bourne Fine Art Part of The Fine Art Society 6 Dundas Street · Edinburgh EH 3 6 HZ +44 (0)131 557 4050 · [email protected] www.bournefineart.com Bourne Fine Art Part of The Fine Art Society