Page 31 - Art First: Wilhelmina Barns-Graham: 2014
P. 31

her com petitive and feisty resolve did lead her to paint the giant single and double
                     sweep ing brushstrokes in the upscale Easter Series canvases (2000–1) that includes
                     Easter Series, Two Brushstokes (2000) presented here. The bold simplicities of these
                     master ful, mini malist canvases are also found in paintings on paper, and are taken
                     up again in the power ful Two Brushstrokes silkscreen prints. Two other millen nial
                     tri umphs on canvas, both painted in 2000, are Gaia Series (Mars) I, 123 x 168.5 cm,
                     exhibited at Tate St Ives in 2005, and Yellow and Blue, 122 x 152.5 cm, pre sent ed
                     in her exhibi tion of paintings at Art First in 2001.


                     Where the late works evoke themes from previous decades, they lend a convin -
                     cing consistency to her artistic credo when seen in its entirety. Evolutions take
                     place over a period of years, not months, and it was never out of the question
                     to re-visit past motifs. The Passing Forms Series and Strung Forms from the late
                     1950s, for example, could be seen as precursors for the Scorpio Series and other
                     groups from the 1990s such as the Gaia Series, the Porthmeor Walk Series, to name
                     a few. There is no way of being absolutely sure that at the time she happened
                     to look afresh at her earlier paintings though. It is known on the other hand, that
                     Black Oval (1959) sparked her imagination when brought out for the 1989 City
                     Art Centre exhibi tion. Nonetheless Untitled (Passing Form Series) and Strung Forms
                     deserve closer atten tion. The manner in which the upright forms move and float
                     across the canvas surface is strikingly prophetic when placed beside works made
                     40 years later.


                     Whether or not visitations to her past rekindled something new, Barns-Graham’s
                     late paintings reveal the same, fundamental dedication to resolving the time less
                     problems of combining colour, shape and form that informs her entire prac tice.
                     But in her final decade, while in her eighties, the diversity of her creativity is truly
                     astounding.


                     The late flourish of experimentation came from her abiding resolve, her sense
                     of urgency, to make the very most of each day that remained.
                                                                        Geoffrey Bertram

                                                     CHAIRMAN, BARNS-GRAHAM CHARITABLE TRUST
   26   27   28   29   30   31   32   33   34   35   36