Pass the Peas

Pass the Peas

44-46 Riding House Street London, W1W 7EX, United Kingdom Thursday, May 18, 2023–Tuesday, June 20, 2023


study for ‘cream glazed pot’ by patrick caulfield

Patrick Caulfield

Study for ‘Cream Glazed Pot’, 1979

Price on Request

study for 'wine glasses' by patrick caulfield

Patrick Caulfield

Study for 'Wine Glasses', 1969

Price on Request

study for 'tate menu' by patrick caulfield

Patrick Caulfield

Study for 'Tate Menu'

Price on Request

portrait of howard hodgkin by patrick caulfield

Patrick Caulfield

Portrait of Howard Hodgkin, 1975

Price on Request

untitled (lobster) by patrick caulfield

Patrick Caulfield

Untitled (Lobster), 1980

Price on Request

study for juan gris by patrick caulfield

Patrick Caulfield

Study for Juan Gris, 1963

Price on Request

study for 'landscape with birds' by patrick caulfield

Patrick Caulfield

Study for 'Landscape with Birds', 1963

Price on Request

study for ‘perfume jar’ by patrick caulfield

Patrick Caulfield

Study for ‘Perfume Jar’, 1964

Price on Request

study (including ‘interior evening’ and ‘interior noon’) by patrick caulfield

Patrick Caulfield

Study (including ‘Interior Evening’ and ‘Interior Noon’), 1970

Price on Request

untitled (jug) by patrick caulfield

Patrick Caulfield

Untitled (Jug), 1963

Price on Request

untitled (jules laforgue) ‘pebbles’ by patrick caulfield

Patrick Caulfield

Untitled (Jules Laforgue) ‘Pebbles’, 1970

Price on Request

untitled (jules laforgue) ‘woman in shadow’ by patrick caulfield

Patrick Caulfield

Untitled (Jules Laforgue) ‘Woman in Shadow’, 1970

Price on Request

44-46 Riding House Street
London, W1W 7EX, United Kingdom

Josh Lilley is honoured to present Pass the Peas, an exhibition of never-before-seen works by iconic post-war British artist Patrick Caulfield (1936–2005).

Working closely with the Caulfield family, the exhibition comprises works on paper, paintings and sketchbooks from his archive, together with a selection of significant paintings loaned from important collections within the UK. The presentation considers the shaping of an artist whose work so often played with reality and illusion, and for whom restraint, conceptually and formally, was fundamental to practice. As an artist with a renowned ability to reconcile society and solitude, this intimate reappraisal reflects on how Caulfield’s philosophy and approach guided his creative methodology and output; providing a deeper understanding of Caulfield’s subconscious, his energy, and his sense of humour as a painter of modernity.

The exhibition’s title, Pass the Peas, comes from a 1968 Western film The Stalking Moon where Gregory Peck’s character considers how the mundane can simultaneously be extraordinary, and how seemingly insignificant details function to punctuate our existence. In Caulfield’s work, we see tools or vessels to elicit a certain feeling – a vase, a wine glass, a room as a site of comfort or of containment. Whilst posing as simple, functional devices, they are much more than the sum of their parts – details which open up worlds of aspiration and inspiration. It is these details, motifs and symbols which are highlighted in the remarkable archival works.

Well known for his shy personality and reclusivity, these unseen works tune into the more private profile of an artist whose life seemed in sharp contrast with his confident painterly style and his iconicism as a virtuoso of contemporary still life. From this body of work, we are able to trace Caulfield’s process and understand these acts and the tenets which drove and defined his work. Perhaps Caulfield’s most powerful legacy today, 18 years since his death, is what it takes to be an artist, how you get there, what you make, and what you share with others.A significant publication which documents and contextualises these archival works will be published on the occasion of the exhibition, to be released at the beginning of June. The book will reproduce the works in the exhibition alongside an essay by art historian and writer, Ben Street. A public event to celebrate the launch of the book will take place on Friday 2nd June at 12pm as part of London Gallery Weekend.

Alongside the exhibition, Josh Lilley presents a new edition of prints, produced by the Caulfield family on the 50th anniversary of Some Poems of Jules Laforgue with Images by Patrick Caulfield (copyright 1973) – a collection of writings accompanied by twenty-two screen prints made by the artist in 1972. Originally conceived as twenty-six plates with four remaining unpublished, the four new editions realise the complete series of works. Entitled ‘The Laforgue Four’ this collection of new posthumous screen prints are available as part of the exhibition.Installation images 12–15: Bishops, 2004 and Window at Night, 1969 (Private Collections).