Modern & Post-War British Art
Modern & Post-War British Art
Auction Closed
November 20, 12:36 PM GMT
Estimate
180,000 - 250,000 GBP
Lot Details
Description
PATRICK HERON
1920-1999
HARBOUR ROOM WITH RED CARPET : 1952
signed and dated 52
oil and charcoal on canvas
46 by 91cm.; 18 by 36in.
The Family of the Artist
Charles Neil
Murray Neil
Barbara Christie-Miller
Her sale, Christie's London, 6th June 2008, lot 100, where acquired by the present owner
London, The Redfern Gallery, The Redfern Gallery Coronation Exhibition: Contemporary British Paintings, 1953, cat. no.33 (as St. Ives Window with Red Carpet).
The Estate of Patrick Heron is preparing the forthcoming catalogue raisonné of the Artist's work and would like to hear from owners of any works by Patrick Heron, so that these can be included in this comprehensive catalogue. Please write to The Estate of Patrick Heron c/o Sotheby's Modern & Post-War British Art, Sotheby's, 34-35 New Bond Street, London, W1A 2AA or email modbrit@sothebys.com.
With delicate, flowing lines and vivid blocks of colour, Harbour Room with Red Carpet : 1952 displays the hallmarks of Patrick Heron's wonderfully dynamic interior scenes of the late 1940s and early 1950s. Although in this period Heron is referred to as a figurative painter, before the development of his wholly non-figurative works from 1956, Heron nevertheless recalls how these paintings felt 'terribly abstract.' To the British public at the time, Heron's works were revolutionary, drawing upon developments on the Continent, in particular the work of Matisse, Bonnard and Braque, of which the home audience was largely unaware. Yet Heron, at the forefront within his artistic peers, had long been absorbing and championing their innovative methods, in particular Matisse's radical deployment of colour, line and form.
He wrote that Matisse's The Red Studio, which he had seen at the Redfern Gallery in 1943, was 'by far and away the most influential single painting in my entire career.' Such works went beyond a simple recording of the visual appearance of things, what Heron called 'the camera eye', and expressed a sensuality and rhythm to which he was deeply predisposed. Only through the abstract harmony of colour and form did Heron believe the 'profoundest human thought and feeling [could] find direct expression.' To this end, Braque's magisterial Atelier interiors which Heron encountered first-hand on a visit to the artist's studio in 1949 also provided rich inspiration, in particular the idea of the 'transparency' of objects through continuous and overlapping lines.
Drawing upon such influences, by the 1950s Heron had created a personal abstract-figurative idiom evident in seminal interiors such as The Blue Table with Window (sold in these rooms, 15th June 2011, for £1,049,250). Harbour Room with Red Carpet : 1952 relates to this piece, as both are part of a series of upturned table-top interiors Heron painted about this time. Form, space and volume are evoked through independent patches of bright, flat, nonrepresentational colour and delicate, winding lines. Particularly elegant is the delineation of the balcony in the background of the composition. Describing Matisse's The Red Studio, Heron spoke of its own 'wonderful wandering lines,' which is equally apt here. They irresistibly lead the eye across the surface and possess a delightful spontaneity in harmony with the planes of pure colour. Reds, blues and yellows create the space of the room, as well as rolling waves seen through the window beyond. Pictorial space was a fundamental concern for Heron, and one he continually explored. In the present work, the distortion of perspective and flatness of the planes forcefully engages the viewer, bringing the objects into immediate proximity - a method Braque championed, believing art should bring the viewer and object together to offer 'the full experience of space.'
Under Heron’s hand, the everyday scene is transformed; given a poeticism through his use of line and colour, seen in the geometric rhythm of the carpet – its form animating the composition with the most minimal of gestures. A central creed of Heron's was that art is to be joyful and in Harbour Room with Red Carpet : 1952, colour and line combine to infuse the work with an unabashed gaiety. In a letter from 1983 Heron wrote about the importance of this seminal series:
‘...the dominant obsession was, of course, the open window, usually with a table top seen in front of it, or indeed half a room or even the bend of a staircase providing the space on the inside of the window. The feeling of a sort of marriage of indoor and outdoor space, through the aperture of the window frame, itself roughly rectilinear and parallel to the picture surface, was really the main theme of all my paintings - or nearly all - between 1945 and 1955. And the window in the vast majority of them was this harbour window, looking out across a balcony over the harbour and bay from the studio cottage, perched right on the sea-wall itself, which Delia and I rented from Mrs Pauline Hewitt (an academic St Ives painter who was at least 30 years older than ourselves) every year from 1947 (our eldest daughter, Katharine, had her first birthday party in front of that window) until 1954. We rented it for two or three months in each of those years, but hardly ever at the same time of the year. I shall never forget the immense sensation of space the first moment we entered that room, at the end of our journey from London: it was an October night and a full moon was rising over Godrevy’ (Patrick Heron, letter dated 27 April 1983).
As Heron mentioned, he and his wife spent their holidays in St Ives for many years, drawn back again and again by the light and landscape that he found so inspiring, and which drew so many artists to the community over the years. Later Heron purchased Eagle’s Nest in Zennor, where he went on to produce some of his most striking fully abstracted compositions and lived for the remainder of his life.