Exhibition

Roy Oxlade

15 Nov 2019 – 11 Jan 2020

Regular hours

Monday
Closed
Tuesday
11:00 – 18:00
Wednesday
11:00 – 18:00
Thursday
11:00 – 18:00
Friday
11:00 – 18:00
Saturday
11:00 – 18:00
Sunday
Closed

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Alison Jacques

London, United Kingdom

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Alison Jacques Gallery is pleased to present an exhibition of paintings and drawings by Roy Oxlade (1929 - 2014).

About

Alison Jacques Gallery is pleased to present an exhibition of paintings and drawings by Roy Oxlade (1929 - 2014). This will be the second show of the British artist’s work to be staged at the gallery. The exhibition follows a recent survey, ‘Shine Out Fair Sun’ at Hastings Contemporary, which marked the artist’s first major public gallery exhibition in Europe. The works on display will span from 1978 to 2006. Oxlade’s works on paper will be shown for the first time at the gallery.

The artistic practice Oxlade developed throughout his six-decade career was grounded by spontaneity and instinct, with colour shaping the essence of each work. Specific objects found in the artist’s home and studio in Kent formed the basis of his pictures: scissors, lamps and lemon squeezers make recurring appearances alongside paint tins, jugs and garden chairs. The diaristic quality of his portrayals, which echo daily life, is also emphasised by frequent references to the artist’s wife, fellow painter Rose Wylie, who was Oxlade’s lifelong muse. “He was very picky about what he painted,” Wylie recalls. “Painting the figure was fundamentally very important to him.”

Drawings such as Black Grass (1985) reveal the artist’s longstanding experiments with crayon and pastel, while Milk tray man (2003) documents Oxlade’s handling of oil paint in the manner of charcoal. Whether realised as graphic outlines or painterly smudges, drawing was a critical tool for Oxlade and he referred to the medium as the foundation of his practice. The works in the exhibition are also reflective of recurring motifs in Oxlade’s art, such as the juxtaposition between object and subject (Figure, Small Jug and Coffee Pot, 1987); and the grid format, which was relied upon to create order (Pink Handle, 1988).

When determining his subject matter, Oxlade was inspired by functionality and aesthetics, rather than symbolism. The possibility of interpretation was vital. As the artist commented in an interview with Marcus Reichert in 2003, “I have no interest in the window-on-the-world kind of painting.” Instead, Oxlade was committed to creating images that embodied “peculiarity, irreverence - even absurdity”. Pursuing this spirit of the absurd led to what Oxlade termed “fresh criteria” - namely, the creation of an image that he thought was worth constructing.

Yet despite his quest for the intangible, a sense of narrative structure was equally desired. Oxlade’s depictions - whether of a thing or a person - were not intended to be immediately recognisable; but, if successful, would contribute to forming a particular image rather than an abstraction. “He was keen on clarity,” Wylie recalls. “Roy liked pushing the paint and then finding the focus.”

Initially coming to attention in the 1950s, Oxlade was part of the radical group of artists taught by David Bomberg in London, who believed that art should be rooted in nature and the artist’s immediate surroundings. Oxlade developed his own unique responses to this ideal, striving to forge a type of “real” painting. He expressed these ideas through his writing, prolifically contributing to prominent publications including Modern Painters, Art Monthly and The London Magazine. Oxlade was also a highly influential figure in art education, mentoring students throughout his career. After obtaining a teaching diploma from Goldsmiths College in 1957, Oxlade studied at the Royal College of Art, completing his MA dissertation in 1976 and his PhD thesis in 1981.

Oxlade received his first significant solo exhibition in 1963, at the Vancouver Art Gallery, Canada, and was included in the John Moores Exhibition at Walker Art Gallery, Liverpool (1962), the Hayward Annual, London (1982), and EAST International at Norwich University of the Arts (1991). However, although acknowledged during his lifetime, Oxlade’s role as a key painter in the British post-war art historical narrative, cemented by his remarkable vision, is only now being fully explored and understood.

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Roy Oxlade

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