WILLIAM McCANCE was born in Cambuslang in 1894, the seventh of eight
children. He studied at Glasgow School of Art from 1911-15, then took a
teacher-training course at Glasgow's Kennedy Street School. Instead of
going into teaching he spent his next years in a more unexpected manner
-- in prison as a conscientious objector.
On his discharge in 1920, he and his wife, the artist Agnes Miller
Parker, moved to London. McCance did some teaching and also found
employment as an art critic, writing a regular column for the Spectator.
His paintings of the 1920s occupy a special place in Scottish art, for
McCance was one of the few Scottish artists of the period to have
responded with imagination and vigour to the cubist, abstract and
machine-age styles which spread throughout Europe after the war.
One of his most remarkable paintings of the early 1920s is Heavy
Structures in a Landscape Setting, a vision of futuristic weapons
contained within a very unusual seven-sided framing device. He also
painted portraits, many of which depict figures reading -- no doubt
reflecting the artist's passion for writing and book design. The Gallery
of Modern Art owns a portrait of Joseph Brewer, an American who also
worked for the Spectator magazine. Painted in vivid reds, greens, and
violets, Brewer assumes the appearance of a robot with gleaming, tubular
neck and neatly articulated, mechanistic hands.
Through his writing and painting, McCance came into contact with many
leading artists and writers, including Stanley Spencer, T E Lawrence,
Edwin Muir and Francis George Scott. Like Muir and Scott, McCance became
involved in the Scottish Renaissance movement, then being orchestrated
by Hugh MacDiarmid. MacDiarmid was immensely impressed by McCance's
work, and in the mid-1920s entered into regular correspondence with him,
praising him as the most ''advanced'' Scottish artist of his day.
In 1930 McCance became controller of the renowned Gregynog Press in
Wales. This small private press produced superb, limited-edition books
featuring original wood-engravings, inventive typography, and unusual
bindings. McCance resigned in 1933 and the couple moved to a converted
windmill at Albrighton, near Wolverhampton.
Due to the heavy workload at Gregynog, he had stopped painting, but at
Albrighton he returned to writing -- not only about art but also about
economic theory, a subject close to his heart. In 1944 he and Agnesmoved
to Reading, where McCance was appointed lecturer in Typography and Book
Production at the university.
After the war he embarked upon a new series of paintings, his first
since the 1920s. Just as Heavy Structures in a Landscape Setting had
been conceived as an anti-war statement, so his paintings of the
mid-1940s responded to the horrors of the Second World War.
In Hiroshima, a figure derived from one of his own sculptures reclines
in the foreground next to an egg and flint, while in the distance a
darkened sun hangs heavily over an apoclyptic landscape. A neolithic
Venus figure appears in the opposite corner, symbol of the birth of
civilisation, now facing its greatest threat.
McCance and Miller Parker separated in 1955. McCance's first major
solo exhibition was held at Reading Museum in 1960 and featured over 200
items. He retired that same year and in 1963, following his marriage to
Dr Margaret Chislett, a colleague at the university, moved back to
Scotland.
The sheer range of his activities -- painting, printmaking,
book-design, sculpture, art criticism, teaching, economics and politics
-- meant that his achievement was never easily quantifiable, and when he
died in 1970 his position as one of the foremost modern Scottish artists
had been largely forgotten.
* Patrick Elliott is Assistant Keeper at the Scottish National Gallery
of Modern Art.
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