Home Exhibitions Painters Sculptors Purchasing Contact
Graham Boyd - 'Picturing the Sublime'

  • Forthcoming

Paul Wright - 'Spirit and Matter'
11 Sep 2010 - 26 Sep 2010
  • Past

David Atkins - 'Beside the Sea'
24 Jul 2010 - 15 Aug 2010

Peter Ole Rasmussen 'In the Penalty Area'
3 Jul 2010 - 18 Jul 2010

Richard White 'Reflective Figments'
3 Jul 2010 - 18 Jul 2010

Juliette Paull 'Whispers'
12 Jun 2010 - 27 Jun 2010

James Pimperton 'Figments with Pigments'
12 Jun 2010 - 27 Jun 2010

Jeremy Annear 'Forensic Traces'
15 May 2010 - 6 Jun 2010

Kristin Vestgård - 'Undergrowth - where words cannot go'
17 Apr 2010 - 9 May 2010

Nicola Bealing
20 Mar 2010 - 11 Apr 2010

Works on Paper
20 Feb 2010 - 14 Mar 2010

Sue Stone - 'Life on the Coast'
28 Nov 2009 - 13 Dec 2009

Jo Taylor - 'Drawn from Life'
31 Oct 2009 - 22 Nov 2009

David Atkins

'Land and City Light'
3 Oct 2009 - 25 Oct 2009


Danny Markey - New Paintings
12 Sep 2009 - 27 Sep 2009

John Huggins - Sculpture
12 Sep 2009 - 11 Oct 2009

Judy Buxton, 'Reflected Landscape'
13 Jun 2009 - 12 Jul 2009

Ffiona Lewis - Recent Paintings
25 Apr 2009 - 17 May 2009

Dido Crosby - Sculpture
25 Apr 2009 - 17 May 2009

Marie-Claire Hamon, 'Oasis'
28 Mar 2009 - 19 Apr 2009

Alfred Stockham, 'The Beach to Himself'
28 Feb 2009 - 22 Mar 2009

James Fisher - as a stranger I depart
22 Nov 2008 - 14 Dec 2008
Past:
Graham Boyd - 'Picturing the Sublime'
advert
  Pdf Download the exhibition catalogue

Ganga was sunken, and the limp leaves
Waited for rain, while the black clouds
Gathered far distant, over Himavant.

T S Eliot, ‘The Waste Land’

The land is parched, waiting for the rains to come. There is a special tension in the air, electric, heavy with foreboding of a storm about to break. The landscape is manifest as latent energy, liquid weight; leviathan oceans of rain press hard against the leaden sky, buckling the atmosphere, pressing on our heart.

An early experience of the vast and ancient landscape of Central Africa impelled Graham Boyd to endeavour to translate that experience through paint; not by conventional pictorial means, burdened by all the weight of narrative and representation, but through a direct engagement with the materiality of the medium.

The paintings evoke a personal experience of nature through a nuanced distribution of ‘weight’, the weight of opposing colours and tonalities pitched against the beat of the mark-making across the plane of the canvas. Boyd paints the experience of nature via the experience of paint, to make not a picture of nature but a painting of the perception and transformative effect of nature on the self.

Although Boyd’s approach to picture-making bears a certain relationship to the language of painting which has its roots in American Abstract Expressionism and Colour Field painting of the 1950s and 1960s as exampled by such artists as Hans Hofmann, Barnett Newman and Larry Poons, its real resonance lies with the European tradition of landscape and its relation to the notion of the sublime. Cézanne’s paintings of Mont Sainte-Victoire and Piet Mondrian, whose Pier and Ocean series, where the artist reduced the ocean to a field of horizontal ciphers and the posts of the pier to similarly attenuated vertical glyphs, have close affinities with Boyd’s practice of using abstraction as a means to approach more closely the hidden and ineffable aspects of nature.

Areas of the painting that at first appear to be the original thinly stained canvas turn out to be painted elements collaged onto the surface at the very end of the working process. In this way the canvas once again becomes an active agent in the work, rather than a passive receiver. Even discrete gestural marks, notionally spontaneous and immovable, are sometimes cut out from other paintings, allowing the artist to orientate them into just the right position to ensure the equilibrium of the painting.

The collage elements return the surface to its original virginity, a chance to begin again, suddenly in the clotted depths of the creamy facture, a lake of aquamarine green opens up, a calm chroma in the midst of a riot of succulence. A flock of golden spatulettes arc through an ochre field, opticalised to a purple haze beneath a gelatinous glaze. Colour and space become feeling, the quiddity of the painted surface is that feeling.

Because the paintings are rectangular the corners become sectors of intense visual energy. What occurs there is key to the dynamic of the surface. It is as if the corners have escaped their geometric moorings and float free; chevronned or combed monochrome rectangles now ‘herd’ the characteristic ‘interval marks’ into fractal architectures of fluid dynamics, like flocks of starlings, swirling atoms or swarms of polychrome insects. Boyd’s paintings are as irrevocable and coherent as the curve of a wave crashing onto the shore, as arresting as a shoal of silver fish turning as one in the depth of a blue ocean.

Richard Dyer © 2009,

Richard Dyer is News Editor and London Correspondent for Contemporary magazine, Art Editor of Wasafiri and Assistant Editor of Third Text.

Sur La Plage Where I Might Be Durumadoo Beat
Graham Boyd
Sur La Plage
acrylic on canvas
113 x 167 cm
Graham Boyd
Where I Might Be
acrylic on canvas
112 x 142 cm
Graham Boyd
Durumadoo
acrylic on canvas
123 x 92 cm
Graham Boyd
Beat
acrylic on canvas
92 x 123 cm
Ticker Caught in the Blue Wazzos Podsnap
Graham Boyd
Ticker
acrylic on canvas
92 x 123 cm
Graham Boyd
Caught in the Blue
acrylic on canvas
92 x 123 cm
Graham Boyd
Wazzos
acrylic on canvas
92 x 123 cm
Graham Boyd
Podsnap
acrylic on canvas
36 x 46 cm
back to top
Forecast Au Bal Lochinvar Winter Journal - Soiree
Graham Boyd
Forecast
acrylic on canvas
45 x 58 cm
Graham Boyd
Au Bal
acrylic on canvas
58 x 79 cm
Graham Boyd
Lochinvar
acrylic on canvas
44 x 46 cm
Graham Boyd
Winter Journal - Soiree
acrylic on canvas
33 x 43 cm
Winter Journal - Going Organic Winter Journal - Second Entry Winter Journal - Finding a Way Winter Journal - Listening to Grey
Graham Boyd
Winter Journal - Going Organic
acrylic on canvas
45 x 58 cm
Graham Boyd
Winter Journal - Second Entry
acrylic on canvas
45 x 51 cm
Graham Boyd
Winter Journal - Finding a Way
acrylic on canvas
45 x 58 cm
Graham Boyd
Winter Journal - Listening to Grey
acrylic on canvas
40 x 49 cm
back to top
Offshore
Graham Boyd
Offshore
acrylic on canvas
51 x 71 cm
© Campden Gallery 2003
Campden Gallery
High St
Chipping Campden
Gloucestershire
GL55 6AG

Tel: +44 (0)1386 841555

info@campdengallery.co.uk