Exhibition - Colin Fraser

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THREADS THREADS THREADS THREADS THREADS THREADS THREADS

Colin Colin Colin Colin Colin Colin Colin

Fraser Fraser Fraser Fraser Fraser Fraser Fraser


We would like to invite you to the preview party of

a new collection of work by

Colin Fraser Wednesday 17th November 2010 6.30 to 8.30pm RSVP all works are for sale full colour catalogue available

Left. Genuflection (detail). Egg Tempera, 32 5 41 inches Front cover. Arome (detail). Egg Tempera, 33 5 48 inches

9 Cork Street, Mayfair, London W1S 3LL Tel. 020 7494 2021 Fax. 020 7691 9755 Roy m. 077 7164 8512 Jason m. 079 7478 6616 info@petleys.co.uk www.petleys.co.uk


THREADS ‘Do you have a title for your exhibition this time Colin?’ Roy asked me recently. ‘Yes, Threads’ I replied, unsure quite where this word had come from, let alone what it actually meant. ‘Sounds interesting’ he said. I suppose ‘threads’ is in part a reference to the physical process of making a painting in egg-tempera, which is a bit like sowing or weaving together a complex tapestry. Only gradual changes can be made however boldly you work. The work is built up in many layers and due to the fast drying nature of the paint is often hatched, dabbed and stroked together. The brushstrokes themselves are very gestural, necessarily reflecting, form, volume, movement, rhythm and speed. They attempt to portray the way something feels both didactically and emotionally. Appearance is secondary to the feel of the thing. You have to put everything into this, allowing your emotion to steer you without letting it tip over into meaningless chaos. Each painting has to become its own unified force. No matter how hard you try, these issues are ultimately steered by the heart, not the intellect. Making a painting is not an intellectual process. It’s about getting involved and excited about what you are going to paint. Being passionate. In truth you can’t control egg-tempera, since the process is so complex, so I no longer try. I want the anticipation and excitement I feel about the work I’m doing to come across. Every painting is conceived and started with this excitement as the driving force. I have been working thematically for a number of years, where each new work is part of on an ongoing process. Certain places, objects or themes become `significant’ to me in some way when portrayed in a painting. The subject matter is the front door into a process that is meditative. You start work and become unaware of any clever ideas or plans that you may have had. It’s just you and the painting. I make an early start in my studio most days and love the challenges entailed in each new work. Tempera is labour-intensive but the rewards of working in this amazing material make it worth it. And there is the knowledge that the collective threads of the body of work behind you is present and alive, leaving its mark on each thing that you do. Colin Fraser

October 2010



‘. . . he said briskly: ‘You have to make sacrifices to get competent. You have to be come like a child to learn a new language and culture properly. Its humiliating but worthwhile, that isn’t exactly the way he describes painting as well, but its not far off.’

Previous page 1. Dawn Flight. Egg Tempera, 48 5 48 inches 2. Still Running. Egg Tempera, 48 5 31 inches



3. Golden. Egg Tempera, 39 5 44 inches


4. Purple Sash. Egg Tempera, 35 5 24 inches


‘I started working in tempera in around 1981 or 1982 I was in Sweden. I was looking for something different. Living in an apartment, oil is messy, you have to use an easel, and it stinks. There is a famous Andrew Wyeth painting Christina’s world [1948], and I remember having it on my bedroom wall as a kid, without knowing who it was by. The boy artist hadn’t known that Wyeth’s compelling work was in tempera.’

5. Arome. Egg Tempera, 33 5 48 inches


10. XX. Tempera, 0 5 0 inches


‘I am inclined to think that there is a strong spiritual point to Fraser’s work. The one chair in a landscape is a typical motif, Fraser says if you ask why the chair’s there, he’s failed.’

6. Blue Hills. Egg Tempera, 25 5 32 inches



7. High Light. Egg Tempera, 31 5 48 inches


13. XX. Tempera, 0 5 0 inches


8. Blue Hills, Egg tempera, 25 x 32.25 inches


9. Glazed. Egg Tempera, 25 5 25 inches


‘. . . so Fraser’s paintings are a curious blend of the understanding and the brilliant.’

10. Lighthouse. Egg Tempera, 19 5 34 inches



11. Near and Far. Egg Tempera, 45 5 32 inches


12. Oasis. Egg Tempera, 46 5 63 inches



13. Clocks. Egg Tempera, 48 5 32 inches


‘. . . egg yolk is amazing stuff, it can cover amazingly, and you can use any colour including white. But it is all so translucent.’

14. Aura. Egg Tempera, 48 5 32 inches


Title


15. Fanfair. Egg Tempera, 22 5 32 inches


24. XX. Tempera, 0 5 0 inches


16. Genuflection. Egg Tempera, 31 5 41 inches


17. Stripes. Egg Tempera, 48 5 33 inches


18. Harbour. Egg Tempera, 47 5 28 inches


Title


title


‘How delicate the shadows on the wall; how rich the flood of sunlight through the room. And light and shadow, form and colour are the great, essential, eternal subjects of the painter, which together, and set upon the human figure, contrive to make it the most difficult and yet the most fascinating subject of them all.’

19. Inner Light. Egg Tempera, 45 5 63 inches


20. Benchmark. Egg Tempera, 24 5 27 inches


21. Threads. Egg Tempera, 22 5 30 inches


title


22. Vinyard. Egg Tempera, 46 5 71 inches



BIOGR A P H Y

S O L O E X H I BITIONS

Colin Fraser was born in Glasgow in 1956, one of those rare painters who combines exquisite craftsmanship with artistic flair. His chosen medium is egg tempera, probably the oldest painting medium in the world. ‘Tempera has’, he says, ‘a vitality about it which reminds me of the dynamism of the sun – never static, always changing’.

1979

Although a Scot, he studied fine art in Brighton and now lives and works in Sweden where the translucent Scandinavian light falling on objects, flooding through windows and casting deep shadows, helps to give his work its extraordinary quality. Fraser has always been a master of light and shade be it in the context of the still life, interior or the figure. In his recent body of work, he has added an extra dimension by including reflections. To achieve this he has placed his objects on a sheet of glass. The tonal differences of the reflected image and shadows produce a new interest and depth, both physically and in terms of meaning. Reflecting too, on his past paintings and looking forward to his new work is an important element in any serious artist’s mind. Above all it is the changing moods of the sun that is the central theme in his work. ‘What I am concerned with’, he writes, ‘is a world that is ongoing, not one frozen as in a snapshot. It’s the feel of the thing, the mood if you like, that the presence of sunlight gives, which fascinates me. You can never pin down in words what the specific ‘mood’ is’. Colin Fraser exhibits regularly at the Royal Academy Summer show, and at galleries in London, New York and Glasgow. He currently lives in Sweden with his wife and two children.

Gallery 20, Brighton, England

1991–3 Gallery Odelhorn, Lund, Sweden 1992

Gallery Löfgren, Gothenburg, Sweden

1993

Fredlund Gallery, Arild, Sweden

1994

Catto Gallery, London, England

1995

Catto Gallery, London, England

1996

Gatehouse Gallery, Glasgow, Scotland

1997

Catto Gallery, London, England

Elinor Ettinger, New York

1998

Gatehouse Gallery, Glasgow, Scotland

1999

Gatehouse Gallery, Glasgow, Scotland

Molesworth Gallery, Dublin, Ireland

2000

Gatehouse Gallery, Glasgow, Scotland

Flying Colours Gallery (Art London)

2001

Catto Gallery, London, England

2003

Catto Gallery, London, England

Mira Godard Gallery, Toronto, Canada

2004

Petley Fine Art, London, England

Gatehouse Gallery, Glasgow, Scotland

2007

Petley Fine Art, London, England

Gatehouse Gallery, Glasgow, Scotland

2008

Mira Godard Gallery, Toronto, Canada

2010

Petley Fine Art, London, England

Quotes from Colin Fraser’s book Inner Light by Richard D North. This catalogue and works illustrated in it are protected by copyright and other rights. No part of this catalogue may be adapted or reproduced by any means for any purpose without the written consent of Petleys Limited. None of the illustrated works may be reproduced, photographed or otherwise copied or adapted without the written consent of the artist. A Petleys Limited publication. Printed by Willow Print Services Ltd, Tel 01322 553 333.


9 Cork Street, Mayfair, London W1S 3LL Tel. 020 7494 2021 Fax. 020 7691 9755 Roy m. 077 7164 8512 Jason m. 079 7478 6616 info@petleys.co.uk www.petleys.co.uk


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