James Gleeson (1915-2008) His Last Drawings, Exhibition Catalogue

Page 1

JAMES GLEESON  1915 - 2008 His Last Drawings


2.  No 357  24.4.08 56.9 x 76.8cm


JAMES GLEESON  1915 - 2008  His Last Drawings

Opening 6-8pm Wednesday  7th May 2014 Closing Saturday  24th May 2014

Watters Gallery 109 Riley Street, East Sydney NSW 2010  Ph: (02) 9331 2556  www.wattersgallery.com info@wattersgallery.com tues and sat: 10am - 5pm;  wed thurs fri: 10am - 7pm

The works in this exhibition are from James Gleeson’s Estate and have never been exhibited before. We are grateful to the Art Gallery of New South Wales and to the Gleeson O’Keefe Foundation for inviting us to join them in the development and promotion of the Estate.

Front Cover: 1.  No 536  15.9.08  42.0 x 59.5cm

We believe this to be the last art work James Gleeson ever completed. He died 35 days later, on 20th October 2008. In 2008 he finished over 300 drawings, a gargantuan achievement for a very sick 93 year old man. This exhibition is a selection from his last drawings. 3.  No 403  11.05.08 59.5 x 41.9cm


5.  No 425  21.5.08 29.7 x 41.9cm

4.  No 375  1.5.08 42.0 x 29.7cm


6.  No 370  30.4.08 41.8 x 59.4cm


7.  No 457  12.5.08 41.9 x 59.2cm


“I start with a drawing always......” (James Gleeson, 2001 - interview with Anne Ryan and Hendrik Kolenberg, AGNSW)

Drawings were so indispensible to James Gleeson’s way of thinking about and making

His imagery was turned on its head – literal depictions of the human body as seen in his

art, it seems inconceivable that they are not better known and celebrated. From his very

early paintings and his imaginary landscapes populated by buff male figures in the 1960s,

earliest days as a young man struggling to determine his life’s path – as a poet?

were replaced by flayed and visceral bone and sinew, mechanical parts and grotesque

a writer? an artist? – he made drawings, almost always with an eye to developing them

microscopic organisms writ large. In late 1983, he started turning them into paintings.

further into paintings.

Charcoal gave Gleeson a freedom and ease in drawing imagery from his subconscious,

Gleeson’s drawings were made with a purpose, even if that purpose was not immediately

while the tonal possibilities afforded him by charcoal were particularly useful with

clear. He built up a rich visual vocabulary that encompassed both the figurative (often

the translation of his imagery into colour, in oil paint on canvas. Once the charcoal

using collages of found images such as mechanical apparatus, microbes and 19th

substructure was complete, it was ordered and resolved with the addition of collage

century illustration), and the abstract. His never-wavering commitment to Surrealism

taken from boxes of pre-cut or photocopied images from books and magazines. This

was mirrored in his embrace of techniques associated with it, such as decalcomania

period proved to be a breakthrough that was to direct the rest of his life, when Gleeson

and frottage. These encouraged chance effects using his chosen mediums of pencil,

developed a new vocabulary of forms that became the defining feature of his greatest

gouache, ink, pastel and charcoal. Evenings were never wasted; if he wasn’t reading he

works, made in the extraordinarily rich and prolific three decades that followed.

was making tiny drawings in trim sketchbooks or on scraps of paper - rich cornucopias of ideas and images that often made their way to canvas.

The drawings in this exhibition were made in the last year of Gleeson’s life and have all the power and resolution that comes from a lifetime of drawing. Remarkable ‘dreamscapes’,

In the early to mid 1970s Gleeson started concentrating on collaged ‘text-drawings’ to

they suggest imaginary worlds of forms suspended in space, pulsating with energy and a

the exclusion of all else. They proved to be a bridge between the hyper-real paintings of

sense of the infinite. The powerful expansiveness of the universe – both the outer space

the 1950s and 60s and what was to come after, and revealed to him the full potential of

of science fiction and the infinite worlds of the microscopic – is all there on these modest

Surrealist techniques including frottage and decalcomania, text and collage.

sheets of paper. Gleeson always believed in the power of the subconscious mind and

In 1977 Gleeson sold much of his past drawing oeuvre to the National Gallery of Australia, a clean out of his studio that proved to be a spur to fresh creativity. Holidaying at Peregian Beach on Queensland’s Sunshine Coast, he embarked upon an intensive period of drawing that explored the dissolution of forms into their essential elements. For the next five years he drew prolifically, making collages and also experimenting with pastel and watercolour.

actively sought to expand conceptions of reality beyond the materially visible, through a commitment to imagination and chance in his art – these drawings are nothing if not manifestations of that. They leave no doubt about James Gleeson’s status as the grand Old Master of Surrealism in Australia. Anne Ryan is the Curator of Australian Prints, Drawings & Watercolours at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. In 2003 she co-curated a major exhibition on James Gleeson’s drawings for the Gallery.


8.  No 452  5.6.08 59.5 x 42.0cm


9.  No 426  22.5.08 29.7 x 42.0cm

10.  No 219  14.1.08 41.9 x 29.5cm


11.  No 325  6.4.08 41.9 x 59.5cm


12.  No 391  6.5.08 41.9 x 59.5cm


14.  No 5  2008 29.5 x 41.8cm

13.  No 275  3.3.08 41.9 x 29.6cm


15.  No 336  12.4.08 42.0 x 59.5cm


16.  No 369  1.5.08 29.5 x 41.8cm


17.  No 533  26.8.08 29.7 x 41.9cm

18.  No 209  4.1.08 41.9 x 29.6cm


20.  No 515  20.7.08 29.6 x 41.9cm 19.  No 207  4.1.08 42.0 x 29.5cm


21.  No 241  28.1.08 41.9 x 59.5cm


22.  No 279  4.3.08 29.6 x 41.8cm


23.  No 285  9.3.08 42.0 x 59.5cm


24.  No 193  17.12.07 29.7 x 42.0cm


25.  No 359  25.4.08 41.9 x 59.4cm


26.  No 255  11.2.08 29.7 x 42.0cm


27.  No 295  20.3.08

28.  No 354  21.4.08

29.6 x 41.9cm

29.6 x 41.9cm


29.  No 384  4.5.08 42.0 x 59.5cm


30.  No 314  1.4.08 42.0 x 59.5cm


Exhibition catalogue Watters Gallery, Sydney, 7 - 24 May 2014 Š Artist,James Gleeson Estate Photographer: Mim Sterling This catalogue is copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purposes of private study, research, criticism or review as permitted by the Copyright Act no part may be reproduced by any other process without written permission.


List of Works 1.

No. 536 15.9.08 42.0 x 59.5cm charcoal, paper collage, powdered graphite, pastel, black felt pen on white wove paper

17. No.533 26.8.08 29.7 x 41.9cm charcoal, powdered graphite, pastel on white wove paper

2.

No.357 24.4.08 56.9 x 76.8cm charcoal, powdered graphite, pastel on white wove paper

18. No.209 4.1.08 41.9 x 29.6cm charcoal, paper collage, powdered graphite, pastel, pencil on white wove paper

3.

No.403 11.5.08 59.5 x 41.9cm charcoal, powdered graphite, pastel on white wove paper

19. No.207 4.1.08 42.0 x 29.5cm charcoal, paper collage, powdered graphite, pastel on white wove paper

4.

No.375 1.5.08 42.0 x 29.7cm charcoal, powdered graphite, pastel on white wove paper

20. No.515 20.7.08 29.6 x 41.9cm charcoal, paper collage, pastel on white wove paper

5.

No.425 21.5.08 29.7 x 41.9cm charcoal, powdered graphite, pastel on white wove paper

21. No.241 28.1.08 41.9 x 59.5cm charcoal, paper collage, powdered graphite, pastel on white wove paper

6.

No.370 30.4.08 41.8 x 59.4cm white pastel, watercolour, brush & ink, wash on white wove paper

22. No.279 4.3.08 29.6 x 41.8cm charcoal, paper collage, powdered graphite, pastel on white wove paper

7.

No.457 12.5.08 41.9 x 59.2cm watercolour, pastel, powdered graphite, paper collage, rubber on ivory wove paper

23. No.285 9.3.08 42.0 x 59.5cm charcoal, paper collage, powdered graphite, pastel on white wove paper

8.

No.452 5.6.08 59.5 x 42.0cm charcoal, powdered graphite, pastel on white wove paper

24. No.193 17.12.07 29.7 x 42.0cm charcoal, paper collage, powdered graphite, pastel on white textured wove paper

9.

No.426 22.5.08 29.7 x 42.0cm charcoal, powdered graphite, pastel, black fibre-tipped pen on white wove paper

25. No.359 25.4.08 41.9 x 59.4cm charcoal, paper collage, powdered graphite, pastel on white wove paper

10. No.219 14.1.08 41.9 x 29.5cm charcoal, paper collage, powdered graphite, pastel on white wove paper

26. No.255 11.2.08 29.7 x 42.0cm charcoal, paper collage, powdered graphite, pastel on white wove paper

11. No.325 6.4.08 41.9 x 59.5cm charcoal, powdered graphite, pastel on white wove paper

27. No.295 20.3.08 29.6 x 41.9cm charcoal, paper collage, powdered graphite, pastel, black fibre-tipped pen on white wove paper

12. No.391 6.5.08 41.9 x 59.5cm charcoal, powdered graphite, pastel on white wove paper

28. No.354 21.4.08 29.6 x 41.9cm charcoal, paper collage, powdered graphite, pastel on white wove paper

13. No.275 3.3.08 41.9 x 29.6cm charcoal, paper collage, powdered graphite, pastel on white wove paper

29. No.384 4.5.08 42.0 x 59.5cm charcoal, powdered graphite, pastel on white wove paper

14. No.5 2008 29.5 x 41.8cm charcoal, powdered graphite, white pastel on white wove paper

30. No.314 1.4.08 42.0 x 59.5cm charcoal, paper collage, powdered graphite, pastel on white wove paper

15. No.336 12.4.08 42.0 x 59.5cm charcoal, paper collage, powdered graphite, pastel on white wove paper

31. No.501 5.7.08 watercolour, pastel on white wove paper

16. No.369(b) 1.5.08 29.5 x 41.8cm white pastel, watercolour, brush & ink, wash on white wove paper

27.4 x 39.6cm


31.  No 501  5.7.08 27.4 x 39.6cm


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