CLARE HENRY finds much to admire in the new exhibition at Glasgow's
McLellan Galleries
LUCKY Glasgow. The Burrell put the city on the map and made Culture
Capital of Europe 1990 possible. This week another super-star gallery,
the McLellan, confirmed Glasgow as an on-going international cultural
capital long after 1990 is over.
Yet Glasgow and the McLellan almost didn't make it. The McLellan got
off to a disastrous start. January's inagural show, foisted on us from
the Arts Council in the south, was universally condemned by critics and
public alike. The Queen put a brave face on it, but Glasgow Art
Galleries director Julian Spalding, resentful of a British Art Show
which he felt was ''a kick in the teeth for Glasgow,'' determined to
organise a rival event: a showcase of recent work by Britain's 50 top
artists, including David Hockney, Francis Bacon, Lucian Freud, and Sir
Eduardo Paolozzi. He has succeeded beyond his wildest hopes.
''The McLellan? It's a dream ticket. It's better than good. It's
fantastic. There are only two British galleries worth talking about now:
London's Royal Academy and Glasgow's McLellan. It's not just the size,
it's the quality of space. Handsome. #3.4m? Money well spent!''
Yes, but what about the show? What about Glasgow's Great British Art
Exhibition? ''Magnificent. Bloody good. I liked it enormously. Bowled
over. Knocked out. Over the moon.''
These accolades are from experts, curators, art dealers, collectors,
and international artists like Michael Sandle, John Bellany, Richard
Hamilton, and Anthony Green who, along with Hockney, Bacon, Kitaj,
Auerbach, the Boyle Family, and many more, are making Glasgow's Great
British Art Exhibition such a roaring success.
With the experience of the Burrell behind us, no one needs to explain
to Glaswegians what a huge impact a charismatic gallery can have on a
city. Foreign politicians have always been well aware of their
magnetism. Think of the Pompidou Centre in Paris or Sydney's Opera
House. The U-turn engineered by Spalding on the McLellan was vital if
Glasgow is to maintain its credibility.
For the bizarre, some would say shameful, fact is that Glasgow,
renowned for its artists and art school, has never seen any top-class
contemporary art, British or foreign. For over 30 years British artists
Hockney and Bacon have led the field worldwide. Even the Russians have
had a major Bacon exhibition in Moscow. But not Glasgow. ''I can't find
any evidence that a painting by Hockney, Bacon, let alone Auerbach, or
Hodgkin has ever been to Glasgow. The new McLellan provided an
opportunity to fill this yawning gap and interest a whole new public. It
seemed to me imperative that they should get that chance,'' said
Spalding.
Councillor Pat Lally agrees. In his catalogue foreword he admits that
Glasgow has been deprived.
So from famine to feast. Every one of the McLellan's palatial
refurbished top-lit galleries (purpose built in 1854 when classic
proportions of grandeur were properly understood) looks stunning. And
the diversity of work is immense.
Spalding has catholic taste and believes that art is and should be
wide ranging in style, but even he is surprised at the power of the
show. ''It's invigorating to see famous names working at strength, and
across such a broad spectrum: figurative, abstract, political,
expressionist, realist, mythical, conceptual, contemplative. No other
country in the world can field as many artists of this calibre. It's an
exceptional period for Britain. A good picture or sculpture should make
you visually alert; attract and hold the eye. That's a mark of quality
and I think almost everything here's got it. The Scots hold their own,
too.''
Spalding may be English but he knows how important local loyalties
are. There are 15 Scots among the 50 artists and six: Bruce McLean, Ken
Currie, Ron O'Donnell, The Boyle Family, Peter Howson, and Jock
McFadyen, dominate the big gallery. Spalding's clever installation and
hanging has seen to that. Indeed it was his admiration for the young
Glasgow figurative painters and their exclusion from the inaugural show
by selectors who specifically said they weren't ''good'' enough, and
moreover were artists of the past and not the future, that angered him
enough to try to cancel that show.
Spalding reminisces, ''This created a stoushie. Much pressure was
brought to bear on me not to do this. Finally the balance was tipped
against me because of the offence it would give to the show's
sponsors.''
Spalding's riposte was to put together, in record-breaking time, ''a
spontaneous display of what the best artists in Britain had been doing
over the last five years.'' The idea, says Spalding, is terribly simple
yet has never been done before. ''I went direct to the artists, told
them I had a big gallery and would like two significant works showing
what they are currently interested in. They were all very excited and
welcomed the fact that the exhibition was outside London. Everyone took
up the offer.''
And most artists have paid Glasgow the compliment of sending their
newest work. Even Hockney. His oil, A Bigger Wave, as Spalding observes,
could have provided the title for the whole show. Painted at his
Californian beach hut last summer (the four panels do work well,
aesthetically, but in fact are due to the small size of the hut!), it
continues the theme of his famous 1967 picture, A Bigger Splash.
This showed a fountain of spray bursting up from where someone had
dived into a clear blue pool. In Hockney's art water acquires a symbolic
status, enabling him to explore surface and depth, light and movement.
The new luscious tidal wave has all the apparent simplicity of a great
painting and continues the tradition of such different
nineteenth-century masters as the Japanese Hokusai and the Frenchman
Courbet. Spalding only asked for two works. Hockney has supplied four,
in tune with the generous spirit of the show.
There are two other oils, one from his 1988 Los Angeles Interiors, the
other a portrait of Edinburgh friend, Jonathan Brown. Hockney has a
habit of painting his friends, (John Cox, ex-Scottish Opera, is
another), and has a whole wall of small portraits in Los Angeles. He
never does commissions, only paints people he knows well, is very good
at catching a likeness, and keeps the portraits for himself, giving the
sitter a colour laser print.
Hockney's passion for new technology can also be seen in Trio, a
96-page bold black and white drawing which, in appropriate response to
the show's impromptu nature, came through the fax machine. It caused a
log jam at one point, then spewed out trails of images retained in its
memory and altogether tied up the McLellan's fax for three hours. Now
pinned on the gallery wall like a patchwork quilt, it reveals, on
inspection, the tiny page numbers (from 3 to 99) and a quaint 'D. H. in
the Hills, Mar. 90' running down the right hand edge.
Spalding made a minor concession for Bacon as all his new work is
currently in a big American show. However, Figure in Movement, 1985, is
characteristically majestic: a tortured looking creature in cricket pads
set centre stage against a black void on strong orange. Kitaj is another
important artist who had a particular influence on the new Glasgow
painters. He does show new pictures: a vivid Hotel Rembrandt and Up All
Night, Fulham Road.
Lucian Freud's Two Men, 1988 (bought recently by the Scottish National
Gallery for #300,000, the entire annual amount available to Glasgow Art
Galleries from the newly established City Art Fund) is in the
centuries-old tradition of life painting; juxtaposing nude and clothed
figures using the same flesh tones as did Rubens but imbuing the subject
with an entirely contemporary feel.
The range of figurative paintings going on in Britain today can be
gauged by moving from Green's decorative star-shaped oil of his mother's
suburban interior, and Howson's heroic Death of Innocence (exhibited in
London but never in Scotland) to Paula Rego's Departure, Currie's Life
Grows Harder, McFadyen's ugly couple clutching Tesco shopping outside a
London East End Hawksmoor church, Bellany's Scottish Sabbath 1990, and
Steven Campbell's Bridgers.
Against these strong pictures, Michael Andrews's photo-realist 1983
acrylic, Sir David Wills Fishing The Spey at Poleek, is a foolishly weak
representation which I am sure he'll regret. His November, 1990, show at
London's Whitechapel takes precedence, Spalding was told. Others, like
Mark Lancaster, Ken Kiff, Peter Blake, Margaret Mellis, and Patrick
Caulfield, had obviously not grasped the scale and ambition of this
show, for their offerings are too small and insignificant.
Anthony Carro, however, certainly did. His huge, curved golden brass
sculpture, Elephant Palace, is quite the most exciting thing he has
produced in years. Sculpture is often neglected on these occasions but
Glasgow's Great British Art Exhibition includes several showstoppers
like the Boyle Family's 19-ft Glasgow commission, Roadwork Study: Urban
Renewal, 1990, their largest-ever piece. This shows an accurate
reproduction of a section of Hope Street now lost forever under tar and
ashpalt. The sculpture will remain in the city.
Bruce McLean, like Mark Boyle, is a Glaswegian who, though
internationally acclaimed, has had little recognition from from his
native city. McLean is one of our fastest stylist movers, always out to
surprise. Starting with performance art in the 1960s, diving into
painting, sculpture, and set design in the seventies and eighties, he
now favours architectural steel constructions painted in bright colours.
At the McLellan his 15-ft long emerald and leaf green panels and table
support two televisions (one turned sideways) playing blue, yellow, and
red videos of McLean alternately nodding and shaking his head to the
sound of Sinatra's My Way. It is to be hoped that his major Arnolfini
show will come to Glasgow later this year.
Totally different in feel are Michael Sandle's aggressive bronze, Fuck
the Media; John Davie's giant fibreglass Head; Barry Flanagan's bronze
Cheval a Deux Disques, part unicorn part Pegasus; Raymond Mason's
massive painted polyester resin tableau of students in his local Latin
Quarter, and Richard Long's four-metre Red Slate Circle which was
installed by assistants working from a plan, rather like doing a giant
jigsaw puzzle.
Richard Wentworth's steel boxes is an odd Pier while Ian Hamilton
Finlay's blue neon caligraphy and guillotined Heads makes an impressive
installation.
Photography is probably the art form of the 1990s. O'Donnell's Rusty
Nude was made in an old Leith forge just days before the opening. ''I
just had to have it. It's so apt,'' said Spalding gleefully. ''It's Mrs
T, the Iron Lady, beginning to rust and fall apart.'' Boyd Webb's
flamingos, technically superb, and Susan Hiller's Secrets of Sunset
Beach pale into insignificance beside Jo Spence's colour photographs
which break the taboos of breast cancer and Gilbert and George who
tackle the AIDS virus in abstracted technicolor.
More abstraction, this time joyful, in Bert Irvin's Arbour 1989 and
John Hoyland's new singing abstracts which have a cosmic dimension,
their passionate colours exploding like celebration firecrackers. A good
note on which to end for Glasgow's Great British Art Exhibition is a
celebration. A celebration for art; a celebration for Glasgow. The dawn
of great things to come after the 1990 party is over. Yes, of course
there are disappointments and omissions: Deacon, Kapoor, Cragg . . .
nothing's perfect. But this is the best Glasgow show yet, so make sure
you see it. It's a chance in a lifetime.
Glasgow's Great British Art Exhibition is at the McLellan Galleries
till May 9. Open 10am-5pm; late night till 10pm Thursdays. Sunday,
noon-6pm.
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