Lucy Jones

Lucy Jones

21 Cork Street London, W1S 3LZ, United Kingdom Wednesday, April 20, 2016–Saturday, May 21, 2016 Opening Reception: Tuesday, April 19, 2016, 6 p.m.–8 p.m.

glorious sunny day by lucy jones

Lucy Jones

Glorious Sunny Day, 2015

Price on Request

through the grass by lucy jones

Lucy Jones

Through the Grass, 2015

Price on Request

fair day by lucy jones

Lucy Jones

Fair Day, 2014

Price on Request

darkening sky by lucy jones

Lucy Jones

Darkening Sky, 2014

Price on Request

autumn day by lucy jones

Lucy Jones

Autumn Day, 2016

Price on Request

night to come by lucy jones

Lucy Jones

Night to Come, 2016

Price on Request

father by lucy jones

Lucy Jones

Father, 2016

Not Available

sitting by lucy jones

Lucy Jones

Sitting, 2015

Price on Request

husband by lucy jones

Lucy Jones

Husband, 2015

Price on Request

tree by lucy jones

Lucy Jones

Tree, 2015

Price on Request

reflections by lucy jones

Lucy Jones

Reflections, 2015

Price on Request

october by lucy jones

Lucy Jones

October, 2015

Price on Request

Flowers Gallery is pleased to present an exhibition of new landscape and portrait paintings by Lucy Jones.

Lucy Jones is known for her painted self-portraits which address ideas of femininity, aging and disability through a frank and revealing portrayal of her own body. For the first time in many years, Jones has returned to making portraits of others. Titles of works in the exhibition such as Husband reveal the intimacy of the relationships between Jones and her sitters, addressing ideas of the self through the unknown interiority of those close to her.

The portrait titled Roger is of a close friend and sculptor, and former fellow Gulbenkian Rome Scholar, the late Roger Partridge. The painting was commissioned by his family during medical treatment for Cancer, and was completed shortly before his death. For Jones, the poignant experience of painting the portrait allowed for a further meditation on the artistic ideas of awkward beauty and the precariousness of life, which have threaded through the work of both artists. Working over an extended period of time, Jones has subjected the portrait to persistent re-configuration, shifting the intensity of characteristically expressive swathes of colour and adjusting the teetering balance of form until physical likeness gives way to an ‘unseen’ essence of the sitter.

During 2014, Jones spent longer periods working outside in the landscape, along the borders of England and Wales. The paintings which have arisen from this prolonged engagement respond to the particular sensations of place and the revolving cycles of the seasons. The landscape paintings can also evoke a sense of Jones’s own physicality through the visceral energy implied by each mark, evident in the language she uses to describe her process: “grabbing hold” of its essence, and “pinning down” colour.

Within each arrangement, memories of space, rhythm and colour are reinvented, beginning with an initial tonal reaction to a pre-coloured ground. In the painting Tree, the picture plane is dissected into two halves by a bowing tree trunk. This division allows for two distinct pictorial spaces to operate within the canvas; the area to the right projects upwards towards the viewer, while the fields to the left recede towards infinity, inviting the viewer to explore the painting from its edges.

Matthew Collings has said: “Colour textures, colour space, colour pleasure – she puts all the elements together in ways that seem both organised, possessing a strong eye for pattern and arrangement, and raw, possessing a great capacity for taking a mad chance. A colour area can seem like a burn or something searing, not something built or carved. Colour can loom, make the whole picture seem like it’s about to take off, or it can be like explosive charges…” 1

ABOUT LUCY JONES

Lucy Jones studied at Camberwell School of Art, followed by the Royal College of Art, where she won a Rome scholarship in 1982. Born in London, she now lives in Ludlow, Shropshire. Recent exhibitions include Looking Out, Looking In, Kings Place, London; Lucy Jones, Chelsea Arts Club, London; and How did you Get on this Canvas?, Flowers Gallery, New York. Her work has featured in group presentations at Cartwright Hall Gallery, Bradford Museum, Bradford; Whitechapel Gallery, London; National Portrait Gallery, London; Scottish National Portrait Gallery, Edinburgh; Compton Verney, Warwickshire; Usher Gallery, Lincoln; and Chelsea Art Gallery, Palo Alto, California. Following her first London solo exhibition, two of her paintings were purchased by the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York. Her work also features in the collections of the Arts Council, London; Clifford Chance, London; Deutsche Bank AG, London; Government Art Collection, London; and Nordstern Collection, Cologne, among others.

1. Matthew Collings, Higher Beings Command: Drive! Draw! Paint!, 2008, Exhibition Cat. Lucy Jones, Stepping Out Into A World Beyond. Flowers Gallery, London. Page 15.