Dexter Dalwood
Double Portrait Camden Town, 2013Oil on Canvas 150 x 220cmSimon Lee Gallery, London20 November 2014
I have been looking forward to seeing new
work by Dexter Dalwood for some time and my visit to his current show at the
Simon Lee Gallery (until 24 January 2015) in London didn’t disappoint.
I was keen to see how his work has changed since his exhibition at the
Gagosian Gallery in 2010. He still uses
the collage technique in a similar way, not only using photographic sources, but also fragments or
allusions to paintings by other artists.
This collage of ideas generates
an image from which he paints an imaginary 'space', but the place in this exhibition is confined to
London and the subjects are more strictly personal rather than historical
moments of earlier works.
The
paintings seem to be about personal memories and associations of past life and
times in London. But as Jorge Luis Borges [1] points out, memories
are created in the present and meanings alter slightly with things added and
taken away through each recall. I read
the paintings as referencing how this process of retrieval of memory involves
thinking about a memory in a new way – rather than just being a faithful record of
the past. They are an assembly of scraps
of information that reconstruct Dalwood’s memories morphed through experience
rather than images of a static point in time.
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Dalwood has often said that you don’t need to get the references to enjoy the work and in a recent interview for Time Out [2] challenged anyone to try. Whilst that may be the case, I feel that knowing the references helps both understanding and enjoyment of the work and as I like nothing better than a challenge, I thought I would make the attempt for "Double Portrait Camden Town".
Looking at the painting I see two possible
references immediately. The first is
that the copper coloured background with the verdigris coloured blobs is a
reference to the ‘piss paintings’ of Andy Warhol. In these works Warhol was paraphrasing
Abstract Expressionism in an ironic way by randomly spraying his screen prints
with urine such that the copper sulphate paint oxidised. The painting Dalwood has used is a 1982
portrait of artist Jean-Michel Basquiat
who had an obsession with Warhol and later collaborated with him. His use of a
double image of the portrait is suggestive of a Rorschach ink blot used by
psychologists to determine underlying personality and emotional
functioning.
Basquiat, 1982 Black photo-silkscreen over oxidized copper |
The second, if I am correct, has a clearer connection to Camden Town. The chest of drawers at the bottom of the painting reminded me of the cheap yellow-brown dresser in Walter Sickert’s painting Ennui, 1917. I initially thought that his Camden Town Murder paintings may be the reference but the only similar dresser I could find in this orientation was in Sickert’s Mornington Crescent Nude, Contre-Jour of 1907. However, the connection may simply be that the location of Ennui is Sickert’s studio in Granby Street, Camden Town.
Ennui, 1914 Oil on Canvas 152x112cm |
In his Time Out interview, Dalwood tells us that the painting is partly “about where Verlaine and Rimbaud lived up in Royal College Street in Camden” [3] so Ennui may well be linked to this intention. Ennui was a recurring theme running through French literature and poetry of the nineteenth century, both as a subject and a symptom. It is linked with melancholia; a state of emptiness that the ‘soul’ feels when it is deprived of interest in action, life and the world and featured in Charles Baudelaire’s Les Fleurs du mal (Flowers of Evil), first published in 1857, 16 years before Verlaine and Rimbaud moved to Camden.
Un Coin de Table, 1872 Oil on Canvas160x225cm |
Les Fleurs du mal marked the beginning of Symbolism, where symbolic imagery was used to signify the state of the poet's soul, as a movement in France and was developed by Stéphane Mallarmé and Paul Verlaine during the 1860s and 1870s. The use of Symbolism in turn leads us to the two vases of flowers on the dresser. I cannot place the source of the images for the flowers but the reference to their use may be to the painting Un coin de table, 1872 by Henri Fantin-Latour. It is a portrait of the Parnassus poetry group and shows the men are gathered around the far end of a table after a meal. Those present include: Paul Verlaine and Arthur Rimbaud, but two figures are missing: Charles Baudelaire, to whom the painting was initially to have been a tribute, who died in 1867 and Albert Mérat who did not want to be painted in the company of the diabolic poets Verlaine and Rimbaud and was reputedly replaced by a bunch of flowers.
Dalwood says he “wanted
to make a painting about the younger protagonist and the elder, the idea that
someone is mentoring someone else” and I think that the pairings are evoked
perfectly albeit differently. He also
draws parallels with the hedonistic openly provocative lifestyle of the two
younger men but the connection of
Warhol and Basquiat to Camden is more opaque and is probably personal
the portrait of Basquiat coinciding with Dalwood’s time at St. Martin’s School
of Art in London.
[1] “Memory changes things. Every time we remember something, after the first time, we’re not remembering the event, but the first memory of the event. Then the experience of the second memory and so on.”
So the titles
provides the clue and the cool treatment leaves room for the viewer’s
imagination and interpretation, but I still maintain that the experience of the
work will be much richer for those viewers who can make the associations
between the subject and the quotations from painting’s history - I just wish I could spot them all.
©blackdog 2014
[1] “Memory changes things. Every time we remember something, after the first time, we’re not remembering the event, but the first memory of the event. Then the experience of the second memory and so on.”
[2] “There's no way any one viewer will
get all the references. It's not a checklist.”
[3]They stayed at 8 Great College Street
(now Royal College Street), where a little plaque commemorates their stay
between May and July 1873.
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