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Clive Hicks-Jenkins [Hardcover]

Simon Callow , Andrew Green , Rex Harley , Clive Hicks-Jenkins , Kathe Koja , Anita Mills , Montserrat Prat , Jacqueline Thalmann , Damian Walford Davies , Marly Youmans

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Book Description

1 May 2011
Critic Nicholas Usherwood has described the painting of Clive Hicks-Jenkins (b.1951) as 'reflective, expressive painting of the highest order'. From a background as a choreographer and theatre director, Hicks-Jenkins has since the 1990s become increasingly well-known as a painter, producing exploratory sequences of works that embrace diverse subject-matter with a consistent and distinctive vision. His paintings are now held in all the principal public collections in Wales and his artists' books are in libraries worldwide; he is a Royal Cambrian Academician and an Honorary Fellow of Aberystwyth University. This book is the first to survey Clive Hicks-Jenkins' work as a whole, and is published in celebration of the artist's 60th birthday. Its wide-ranging texts, written by poets, novelists and art historians based in Britain and the USA, address the themes inherent in Hicks-Jenkins' different bodies of work: the use of locations in his paintings; his interest in creating theatrical ensembles from familiar objects; the sequence of huge drawings inspired by the Welsh folk tradition of the Mari Lwyd; the important sequence of works made in response to the fragments of a Tuscan altarpiece at Christ Church Picture Gallery; paintings exploring stories of the miraculous; the influence of theatre in the artist's use of puppets as preparatory maquettes; the important role of drawing; the production of artist's books; and Hicks-Jenkins' dialogues with contemporary poets. The book will be welcomed by the artist's growing following of supporters and collectors and by all those with an interest in contemporary narrative painting.

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About the Author

Simon Callow is an acclaimed actor, director and writer, whose books include Being an Actor, Love is Where it Falls, My Life in Pieces and highly-regarded biographies of Charles Laughton and Orson Welles. Damian Walford Davies is Reader in English at the Department of English & Creative Writing at Aberystwyth University and author of three collections of poetry. Andrew Green is Librarian of the National Library of Wales and writes and lectures widely on the transmission of culture and information. Rex Harley is a writer whose published work includes fiction, poetry and articles on the visual arts and music. Kathe Koja is a novelist based in Michigan whose published books include The Cipher, Skin and Headlong. Anita Mills was formerly Associate Professor and Chair of the Art Department at St Cloud State University, Minnesota, where she taught drawing, design and printmaking. Montserrat Prat is a television producer whose recent work has included a documentary on religious art across Europe and a music film of Haydn's Seven Last Words. Jacqueline Thalmann is Curator of the Picture Gallery at Christ Church, Oxford. Peter Wakelin has written art criticism for various publications including Modern Painters and the Guardian, and has curated two exhibitions on 20th-century art for the National Museum of Wales, also writing the accompanying catalogues. Marly Youmans is a published poet, novelist and short-story writer described as 'the best-kept secret among contemporary American writers'.

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Amazon.com: 5.0 out of 5 stars  2 reviews
5.0 out of 5 stars Clive Hicks-Jenkins,a world onto itself 21 July 2011
By babylon baroque - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
Having been introduced to Mr. Hicks-Jenkins work through the ever expanding world of blog sites, it is a bit of a wonder that his work caused me to pause.
The world of art blogs is a vast and at times overwhelming,often dis-heartening place;so many contemporary works are ironically twisted images achieved through digital means. I tend to wallow in self imposed isolation admiring only the works of the16th and 17th cent.
Clive Hicks-Jenkins work touched a nerve and caught my attention.
Clearly painted with loving attention, with admiration for the past but not slavishly aping it, Clive-Jenkins has created a singular vision. A sensual Byzantium , roiling figures, that are at once attractive and serene, desirable and aspirational, I wish to be where his players are emotionally, even if that means tackling a wolf. His color sense heightens this experience, red figures, blue and green, convincingly rendered, but again not enslaved to an Academic standard. Their is a sense of magic to his work, I hesitate to use such a word, so ripe for cliche, yet it holds true to this artist's work. It has been mentioned his work evokes the theatric schemes of the Ballet Russe, most particularly Bakst, that was my immediate thought. For like Bakst there is a physical joy to Hicks-jenkin's work. Again I use the word loving, but that is the feeling one experiences in gazing upon the blessed Francis and his Brother Goose. It is so clear, this sense of affection that Hicks-Jenkins has lavished upon the goose. The artist cites Giotto, that Giotto-esque gentleness pervades Hicks-Jenkins work as well.
I have only just begin to explore this fantastic world,I will do so, thoughtfully and carefully.I imagine like great artists of the past have done before, Hicks-Jenkins work will influence my own work. Perhaps a lovely blue goose is in order in some new composition. So pleasant to have found inspiration from a contemporary.
Thank you Clive Hicks-Jenkins.
Leonard @ BabylonBaroque
5.0 out of 5 stars WOW! 28 Jun 2011
By Jeffrey Lebowski - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
(note: to see this review with photos from the book inserted, see my blogspot blog at zoe-in-wonderland. However, I have tried to post the photos above, beside the one of the book.)

Dancer, actor, puppeteer, choreographer, director, painter...

The first thing that strikes me about Clive Hicks Jenkins' art is the motion of it. Always, there is a sense of an action not quite complete on the canvas, a life un-stilled by the process of its recording by the artist. The figures, shadows, and hidden recesses in his massive conté drawings, prints, and paintings, as well as in his sketches are all seething with life. And none of it is sterile motion--the figures move with purpose, driven by an uncontrollable emotion. As Marly Youmans describes St. Francis in "The Congregation of Birds" in her chapter of this new monograph, "The legs are drawn upward in a posture that at once suggests slumber, dance, and leaping" (109).

(To see this particular image, you must go to his website or my blog, because of Amazon rules.)

St. Francis is thus caught not in one moment of time, but in his being. His knees are red from kneeling, and indeed, maybe he is just now dropping to them, or rising from them, but whatever the motion is, it is some ecstatic motion, full of the joy of being and worshipping and proclaiming his love.
Each painting starts with sketches, and you can imagine the atelier littered with them, some taped to the wall or the easel, some scattered across the floor for the artist to dance across, eyeing them from all directions and from all positions, and in motion. A sketch becomes a maquette, a flat puppet of moving parts which then gets tacked on the wall, only to shift and leap and twist into some other position every time the artist turns his back until suddenly, everything is exactly as it should be, the core of the character is somehow distilled in a particular motion, and the painting begins.
Here is another fact of Clive's painting techniques which many of the authors in this book touch on: every canvas begins with red. Red oxide paint covers every inch, and is there beneath every figure, forming what Clive describes as the life-blood pulsing just beneath the skin, which you can sometimes just see, as in the St. Francis painting, where, as Youmans points out, the kneeling has left its mark, or the hint of the stigmata ghosts along his foot; or in this painting of St. Hervé and the Wolf, the heat of the complex emotions between the two burns through.

(See above image of St. Herve and the Wolf")

There is a miraculous moment in this monograph, when Marly Youmans writes a fictional piece alongside the painting "Touched,"

(See above image of "Touched")

a story which glows and unravels and sharpens with the intensity of a perfect, lucid dream. In this dream, Clive is taking tea with Jean Cocteau:

"The most marvelous light, Cocteau says, gesturing at a raspberry-coloured tree. He sloshes tea on the tablecloth in his enthusiasm.
The clothes of the painter and Cocteau are dusted in lime-green. A few petals cling to their jackets and hair. The two drink more tea and talk about dreams and visions while clouds draw blue shadows over them and then pass by. The sunlight steadies.
Nothing appears soft-edged or blurred. Everything stands distinct in the light. Every line is as strong as the facet of a crustal, every colour as rich as a jewel."

At this point, something miraculous occurs, which I will leave you to discover in the book itself. Marly follows the moment of revelation thus:

"The clarity of a dream, he says.
The light increases enormously, and the paths and trees burn, every pebble and twig distinctly present. The painter's hands tremble as he drinks in the brilliance and crisp edges of the garden, the glimpses of saints, and the young Virgin, her crimped hair verring from her head like a cockeyed halo.
This is what I wanted, he thinks, more light and every intent so clear. Colour that says anything is possible. Nothing hidden (104, Youmans)."

And that is what he achieves, as well, and the book is full of examples of it, large, lush reproductions on almost every page. There is a wide range of writing-style in here; all of it is fascinating. Kathe Koja describes the dance of the maquettes with a wonderful lyricism, and explores another of the main draws--for me--to Clive's art: where it takes you. As she quotes him in a description of the beginnings of his journey through the theatre-life, she grasps hold of a powerful and telling phrase:

Clive Hicks-Jenkins: `I used to be a puppeteer, my first job after I left ballet school. It was a serious company, presenting an intriguing blend of techniques...I became expert with marionettes, learned the techniques of black theatre, was deft with shadow puppets and rod puppets of all persuasions...As a dancer, I appeared with puppets as my partners.
By the time I was through, I had been spoiled for my initial choice of career as a dancer. Too many ideas flying around my head! Instead I evolved into a choreographer, a stage director and designer, and I carried with me the puppeteer's love of masks, mechanical simulacra, and sleight-of-hand.

"`Sleight of hand' is an apt, and delicious, description for the basis of the painter's art: deft, arduous, painstaking motor skill yoked with the power to make of what is not there, what is; not to deceive but to enlarge the experience of seeing, and enable the eye and the heart to take in what the creating, presenting mind intends: a man, a saint, a bird or a beast, where there are `really' only strokes of colour on a flat plain. Is art `real'? Yes. And no (142, Koja)."

Not to deceive but to enlarge the experience of seeing. Exactly.
And back to the collection of moments or emotions caught in each of his paintings that makes each of them so un-still, so alive: that feeling is--it must be--a result of the contact between the painted and the painter, a moment described once in the old myths of the sculptor whose Venus came to life: he had formed her, yet she already `was,' and the creator and created met in that electric moment of the not-real revealing itself as real.

"...a maquette is posed, exercised, put through various paces on the studio wall, but the ultimate gift of this dance is neither completely controllable nor wholly imagined beforehand: the maquette's own being is a gift to Hicks-Jenkins in his process, and to the finished piece of work as a whole (146, Koja)."

(See above image of maquettes)

Anita Mills also addresses this motion. She goes through the artist's old sketch books and describes the moment when she feels he came to that particular ability, that unique talent of combining all his talents into one, or choreographing and taking part in a dance with the scene unfolding beneath his hand. Surprisingly, this moment occurred not in a `narrative' painting (in the usual sense of the word!), but in plein air drawing--in landscape sketches, when he suddenly realized that he wasn't making maps or topographical records; he was capturing the mood, motion, weather--the life of the moment. And as she states, ..."he has a deft ability to abstract a subject, distilling it to its most essential spirit (131 Mills)."

(See above image of "Borderlands")

Before this review becomes longer than the book itself, I should close with a few clear statements about it. First of all, it's big, and hardbound, and heavy (and red), and yet I have carried it with me everywhere ever since it arrived in the mail. It is full of large, gorgeous reproductions spanning Clive's entire career, from a lovely drawing of Nefertiti impressively rendered by an awe-struck nine-year-old through stage sets and costume designs from his theatre days, and right up to his most recently (at this time) shown work, "Christ Writes in the Dust: The Woman Caught in Adultery." The writing throughout is a fantastic mix of biography, analysis, and creative response, and on every page there is something to make you stop, ponder, and dream. And create.
I couldn't recommend it more highly.
--zoe
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