Graham
Peacock
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Graham
Peacock, " I of the Universe " 2002-2003,
51" x 103.5" x 3.25"
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XXXXXI
first met Graham Peacock in 1980 on a tour of Edmonton studios.
He stood out as a strong personality, intelligent, with a cheeky
British sense of humor. There was a set of drums in the studio
and he told me that he played in a rock band. He seemed full of
energy and artistic ambition.
.........Our next encounter was at the Emma Lake workshop
of the following year held in Saskatchewan. I had been the invited
critic and was there with the painter, Lucy Baker. Peacock was
a participant. We all got to know each other quite well. He
had
been profoundly inspired by Larry Poons’ cascade paintings
of the 70’s with their radical, large-scale experimentalism.
Peacock was raking and squeegeeing paint onto big, heavy ply
rugs
and other unlikely surfaces, trying anything he could think of
to find a new way. I loved his all-out, go for broke approach.
He didn’t care what others thought and he was not afraid
to make a fool of himself. He was going to be himself no matter
what.
XXXXX Peacock’s revelation came in 1982 in a series
of blue and white, shaped pictures which he dubbed the “Polo”
series. They showed a nasty, jagged, small scale drawing which
he had achieved by working on the floor pouring one flood of color
over another and, so controlling the drying of each, as to get
a crackling, electric, crazing, revealing sharply contrasting
colors from below. These Polo pictures had harshness, a dryness,
and an edgy “ugliness”. They were raw and intense
and they felt very original. They went completely against the
prevailing style of those who saw themselves as carrying on the
tradition of Abstract Expressionism and Color Field painting:
that of Jules Olitski with its exquisite refinement and sublime
beauties. Peacock was confirmed in his heresy by Lucy Baker whose
artistic personality was even less in sympathy with Olitski’s
than his and whose work of that time also challenged Olitski’s
hegemony. Here, in 1982, was the beginning of New New painting.
...........A crucial factor for the New New has been the
development of plastic paint. The New New generation was the first
to have available to it, almost from the first, acrylics, as a
full-bodied, painting medium, with all the capabilities of oils
and much more. Part of the excitement of the New New painters
lie in their audaciously experimental approach to this brand new,
still very much evolving, medium. And no one has plunged into
it with more abandon than Peacock. No one has searched out and
discovered so many of its secrets and possibilities. He is the
only member of the New New to make his own acrylic gel and from
the start he has been at the forefront of the new technology.
He could be called a master alchemist turning plastic into gold.
..........In his book, What Painting
Is, James Elkins uses an extended analogy between painting and
alchemy to show how the art of painting, at it’s deepest
level, is about the ability to think and feel in paint, which
amounts to the painter’s intensely sensual, imaginative
and mystical identification with this most magical of all substances.
Elkins writes “paint has its own meaning, entrancing, utterly
addictive, replete with expressive force, that can keep hold of
an artist attention for an entire lifetime”. “There
is no meaning that cannot seem to flow from paint itself, from
the spectator’s standpoint, looking at a finished painting,
marks can become eloquent records of the painters body, and through
the body come indescribable but powerful ideas about the painter’s
feelings and moods. Paint incites motions, and through them it
implies emotions and other wordless experiences. That is why painting
is a fine art; not merely because it gives us trees and faces
and lovely things to see, but because paint is a finely tuned
antenna, reacting to every unnoticed movement of the painter…
fixing the faintest shadow of a thought in color and texture”.
...........For Peacock, finding
and staying in touch with his higher, inner self, and a passionate,
mind-body, responsive dialogue with the medium, are identical.
He has created his own personal “craft” in a brand
new medium. He begins working on the floor. A canvas is rolled
out in a huge trough which can be as large as 60 ft long, 7 ft
wide. He then pours different levels and controls the drying
process
of each with a system of fans. Next he tacks the length of canvas
to the wall for study. Sometimes he takes it down and puts it
on the floor again to do more pourings. If he is satisfied that
the length has possibilities, he begins the second phase, inpainting
with a brush or collaging on pieces of dried paint as different
colors and textures. Then he “finds” his pictures
in the length. This process has been succinctly described by
the
Emersonian poet, the late A.R. Ammons.
No
so much looking for the shape
as being available
to any shape that may be
summoning itself
through me
from the self not mine but ours
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................This
relates to the “hallucinatory seeing” of the Surrealists.
It relates too, to Leonardo’s recommendation to study blotched
and stained old walls for compositional ideas. It is a way to
conjure the unconscious and the creative imagination. Usually
Peacock “finds” a number of pictures in each length
but occasionally the whole picture becomes a single, epic statement.
Since Peacock begins without a prioris and discovers his edges
later, his picture develops from the inside out and its shape
usually turns out to be irregular. Once he identifies it, he cuts
it out from the length. Then he builds a special stretcher to
fit it, stretches it, and hangs it for further study and adjustments.
The whole process takes months, but Peacock is always working
on many pictures at the same time. Sometimes he adds pieces of
foam to the back of the picture and the stretcher bars. This creates
a rounding and softening of edges and a swelling, and undulating
of surfaces; the whole can take on the feeling of skin, flesh,
and bone. Sometimes he adds the opposite: sharp, hard, metallic,
reflective and/or transparent elements like bits of mirror or
metal, beads or glass. Everywhere there is an intense physicality
and tactility of surface and textures which range through the
organic and geological, the sleekly glossy and the dryly shriveled.
XXXX
Finally, Peacock decides the orientation of the picture, the way
that it will hang on the wall. Often several orientations work
equally well. Unlike “series” painters, who take one
idea and drive it home before moving on to another (Morris Louis,
Kenneth Noland or Bruce Piermarini are perfect examples), Peacock
unfolds his art in many directions at once. If he is sometimes
inconsistent, he also keeps more balls in the air at the same
time than almost anyone else. His oeuvre develops not as a series
of distinct campaigns but as a continuous, ever more encompassing
expansion.
XXXXPeacock’s
way of working makes his pictures seem like the result of natural
forces, especially the flow and viscosity of paints and gels.
This kind of “process painting” first appeared, full
blown, in Pollock’s drip style of 1947-1950, and was developed
further by Morris Louis, Jules Olitski, Larry Poons and others.
The painter so organizes himself as to let the medium lead, to
let the painting “paint itself”. The painter trusts
his genius, surrenders traditional forms of graphic control, and
admits more and more chance and chaos into the process. In this
way the painter “keeps it real”, keeps his own reactions
fresh, spontaneous, in-the-moment, and opens himself to the unexpected.
In one sense, the process painter can be said to be more passive
than the traditional painter, but, in another sense, the process
painter could also be said to be a god-like creator, orchestrating
nature itself. With a little creative effort, any motivated viewer
can come to see a process painting as an act of will, a personal
statement, a living presence, a sublimated self. Peacock’s
paintings are nature, yet nature intensified and perfectly focused
by the human mind.
..........And amazingly enough, the
more Peacock lets paint and natural processes rule, the more recognizable,
but not consciously intended, images, constellations of images,
and even narratives, appear: a face, a bird, a dragon, a landscape,
a battle, or anything else conceivable. Different viewers often
see different images but there is also much agreement. Sometimes
these “emergent” images even provide an organizing
focus, or one way to focus, the picture. They convey a sense of
infinite and fluid meaning. They help the viewer get involved
and actively recreate the work. They evoke the mystery and wonder
of our being-in-the-world. In some instances, Peacock makes the
whole picture shape suggest an image: a human profile or body,
an animate or unanimated object like a fish or a surf board. This
free play with the world’s forms is everywhere in Peacock’s
art. It makes moot terms like “abstract” and “non-objective”.
XXXX No one has pushed process painting as far as Peacock.
He is a radical naturalist, an unapologetic materialist, and a
shameless sensualist. It is the genius of his art that such an
extravagantly physical outpouring lives so wholly in the spirit.
Each picture a singular, autonomous, spiritual entity, facing
us, speaking emotional truth.
..........In November of 2003 Peacock had a one man show at The
Museum of New New painting in Toronto. He called the show “New
New Illusionism”. Crisply drawn shapes-crescents, loops,
ovals, circles and straight lines are bluntly placed on top of,
or cut into, a process painted “ground”. These semi
geometric shapes are often shaded with traditional modeling (“illusion”)
adding to their deliberate, willful feeling. Process painting
and gesture painting are here abruptly set against each other.
The effect is funky, punky, goofy, humanizing, very playful yet
presented with enormous passion and integrity. With this show,
Peacock has achieved the assurance and consistency of a true master. |
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Graham Peacock, " Immoral
Memory" 2001-2003, 87" x 52" x 2.5"
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