Elements of Abstraction: Space,
Line and Interval in Modern British Art
Before 1920, we find two kinds of British artists testing
the borders of figurative art. There were the Bloomsbury 
group, who adopted the sensuous colours of Gauguin and Matisse to produce
images of bourgeois comfort; and then there were the Vorticists, represented
here by Edward Wadsworth. Theirs is a very different language, close to Italian
futurism. It expresses energy and power through thrusting angles and aggressive
compositions. But both Bloomsbury  and
Vorticism stand as false starts in the light of what happened later.
For in the war years, and the decade following, Britain Britain 
British artists picked up on these ideas in different ways.
In the forties and fifties, two main groups emerged. One was the West Country
School, who took the Constructivist vocabulary and, not always consciously, absorbed
into it the sights and atmosphere of the Cornish coastline.  Ben Nicholson’s hypnotic squares and circles
point to the local scene with their soft greys and browns. Peter Lanyon’s
dramatic perspectives, and Terry Frost’s painterly grids, both resonate with the
sensations of the Cornish landscape.  Even
Roger Hilton, who wanted the picture surface to be an autonomous image,
suggests the local scene: his painterly Black
on White March 54, could be country roads or hedges on snowy fields, seen
from far above. Through such artists, the Constructivist language had lost its
revolutionary Russian origins, and become applied to the exploration of the
inner life and natural forms.
The second major group using Constructivist ideas was
gathered around Victor Pasmore in London 
This fascinating group – other names are Adrian Heath,
Gillian Wise, Anthony Hill – was soon overshadowed in the art world by Abstract
Expressionism. Their successors are the Systems Group, who employ mathematical
formulae to make visual patterns. They, too, have been overlooked, and it is
good to have a chance to see their work here: when described it sounds severe
and unemotional, but there is also something exhilarating in these complex,
repetitive configurations.
Another strand is that of British colourists – there are
fine works here by Heron and Hodgkin, grandiloquent canvases by John Hoyland
and an example of Callum Innes’s poured paint technique.  If there is a theme that links all the
approaches taken it is a generally positive mood. Whether the work is contemplative
in the St Ives mode, or ebullient as in the energetic brushwork and flaming
colours of Gillian Ayres, it consistently communicates a passion for making. A
well-produced catalogue, with colour plates of some rarely seen works and
meticulous scholarly essays by Brandon Taylor and Alan Fowler, adds to the
attraction of this intriguing and uplifting show. 
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