Tony Bevan: Trees and Archives

Tony Bevan: Trees and Archives

12 Brook's Mews London, W1K 4DG, United Kingdom Wednesday, November 26, 2014–Tuesday, January 6, 2015

PRIVATE VIEW TUESDAY 25 NOVEMBER, 6-8PM

This winter Ben Brown Fine Arts presents Trees and Archives, an exhibition unveiling twelve new, large-scale works by British artist Tony Bevan. Bevan’s distinctive graphic style and continued exploration of figurative and abstract representation have made him one of the UK’s leading contemporary painters. This exhibition showcases the artist’s investigations into his two most recent themes, trees and archives, accessing inchoate spaces and the innermost recesses of the mind.

Bevan’s oeuvre is founded on the unpredictable quality of charcoal and the richness of his own pure acrylic pigments. By forcing charcoal into the pores of unstretched canvases on the floor of his Deptford studio, he creates splinters and shards that are locked in with the acrylic medium. Occasionally marking his canvases with a hand, foot, or item of clothing, Bevan’s energetic physical involvement with his paintings is recorded in their texture.

Bevan’s tree paintings, archives and self-portraits are motivated by the desire to explore hidden topographies. Whilst travelling in China between 2007 and 2008, the artist came across an ancient tree in the courtyard of a temple in the district of Dujiangyan, Sichuan Province, and felt compelled to examine its internal forms. His responses to this tree reflect an appreciation of both its architectural potential and near-human element: dark strokes create a striking interplay between positive and negative space in this body of forms, whilst the wood’s gnarled surface suggests scabbed human skin. The tree’s ancestral associations are particularly striking in Tree (no 12) (PC146), 2014, where flecks of orange and black, recalling the primal palette of cave paintings, are juxtaposed with skeletal forms and limb-like branches.

The Archives, Bevan's latest series, see the artist taking on infinite space. Inspired by Jorge Luis Borges’ “The Library of Babel”, a story depicting the universe as a library, these labyrinthine repositories of books allude to the vast spaces of the imagination. Archive (PC142), 2014, and Archive (PC144), 2014, depict a grid of bookshelves expanding to the edges of the canvas and beyond, invoking the surreal atmosphere of Borges’ text. By resembling the characters of an unknown language in their repetition and striking graphic depiction, Bevan’s books form a portentous meditation on contained knowledge.

The artist will be in attendance at the Private View and is available for interviews.

ABOUT THE ARTIST
Tony Bevan (b. 1951) studied at the Bradford School of Art (1968–71), Goldsmiths' College (1971–74) and the Slade School of Fine Art (1974–76). Since 1976, Bevan has exhibited widely, holding his first solo U.S. shows at Ronald Feldman Gallery in 1988 and L.A. Louver in 1989. Bevan has also exhibited at the ICA, London, (1987-88), Staatsgalerie Moderner Kunst Haus der Kunst, Munich (1989), Whitechapel Art Gallery, London (1993), and the Kunsthalle, Kiel (1988). A major retrospective was presented by the Institut Valencia d’Art Modern (IVAM) in Valencia, Spain (2005).

In March 2007, Tony Bevan was elected as a Royal Academician of the Royal Academy of Arts in London. His work is included in many prominent international collections such as the Museum of Contemporary Art in Los Angeles, The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, The National Portrait Gallery and the Tate Gallery, London.