ART CITIES:London-Frank Bowling
Over the past 60 years, Frank Bowling has relentlessly explored the properties and possibilities of paint. He has experimented with staining, pouring and layering, adopting a variety of materials and objects. Throughout his career, Bowling has investigated the tension between geometry and fluidity. His large, ambitious paintings are known for their distinctive textured surfaces and colorful, luminous quality.
By Efi Michalarou
Photo: Tate Archive
This is the first full retrospective exhibition dedicated to Frank Bowling. The exhibition brings together a lifetime of large-scale artworks. It includes key series such as the iconic “Map paintings”, the visually arresting “Poured paintings” made by pouring paint down an inclined surface, and the sculptural paintings of the 1980s evoking riverbeds, all the way to mature work selected from a recent period of explosive productivity. In 1953 Frank Bowling left his home town New Amsterdam and travelled to London. He arrived here during the celebration for the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II. After some early attempts at poetry and two years of service in the Royal Air Force, Bowling enrolled at the Royal College of Art, London. From 1959 to 1962 he studied painting alongside David Hockney and R.B. Kitaj and became the first Black artist nominated as a Royal Academician. Bowling’s early work demonstrates his interest in social and political issues as well as personal narratives. It often depicts painful memories and disenfranchised individuals. During this time Bowling started to use both figuration and abstraction in his work. Adopting the theme of a dying swan, he began to explore formal concerns. He used principles of geometry to shape the canvas and structure the composition. He also began to study color theory and juxtapose planes of bold colors. Between 1964 and 1967, Bowling brought together many different pictorial approaches, sources and techniques. This was a period of great change in his life and career. In 1966, he moved from London to New York, and was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship the next year. This enabled him to establish himself in the US, where he spent most of the following decade. Bowling continued to use figurative elements in his work. Some are expressionistic, painted in a gestural manner. Others are more graphic, rendered through printing techniques. Bowling adopted different images as sources for his figures. These include photographs of scenes he staged, family pictures and images from magazines. A silkscreened image of his family home in New Amsterdam became a central element in his paintings. His mother built the house for her family, who occupied the upper floors, and her business, Bowling’s Variety Store, situated on the ground floor. From 1966–7, Bowling also began to use stencils in his work, and the first outlines of continentlike shapes appear. These works signal his ongoing interest in geometry, intuitive use of bold planes of colour and exploitation of the unpredictable nature of paint. Soon after moving to New York in 1966, Bowling stopped painting the human figure. He began working on a group of paintings characterised by their scale, fluid application of acrylic paint and luminosity. Additionally, through his writing in Arts Magazine (1969-72), Bowling played a key role in debates around “Black Art”. He championed the rights of artists to engage in any form of artistic expression, irrespective of their identity or background. The works referred to as the “Map paintings”, date from 1967–71. Fields of color are overlaid with stencilled maps of the world and silkscreened images. Bowling worked on unstretched canvases, placing them on the floor and on the wall. He applied paint by staining, pouring and spraying. The southern hemisphere often dominates these canvases. This focus marks Bowling’s rejection of the westerncentric cartography of many world maps. Images of the artist’s mother and children are among those silkscreened onto some of the canvases. The results are complex, layered artworks. These “Map paintings” reveal Bowling’s interest in the way identities are shaped by geo-politics and displacement. Around 1973, Bowling began pouring paint on to canvases to produce layered effects of contrasting colors. The resulting paintings reveal the processes of their making. They were Bowling’s personal response to the challenges of formalism in Modernist painting, a critical stance promoted by the American art critic Clement Greenberg. It suggested that the visual aspects of an artwork are more important than narrative content. Greenberg supported Bowling’s work and the two were friends. In his New York and London studios, Bowling built a tilting platform that allowed him to pour paint from heights of up to two metres. The spilling paint created an energetic and innovative painting style. These “Poured paintings” were the result of controlled chance. They reveal Bowling’s interest in the tension between a structured approach to painting and accidental developments. During this time Bowling’s artwork titles become increasingly enigmatic. Bowling names a painting once it is finished, attempting to reconnect with what took place during its making. Titles often allude to aspects of the artist’s daily life, referencing people and personal associations. Yet they remain ambiguous, preventing a prescriptive reading of his work. By the end of the 1970s, Bowling was fully in control of the painting techniques he had spent the last ten years fine-tuning. He had a deep understanding of the dynamics of the flow of paint and the drama of color combination. In need of new challenges, he adopted a variety of interventions. Bowling began using ammonia and pearlessence, and applied splotches of paint by hand, producing marbling effects. He embraced accidents, allowing him to achieve unexpected results. For example, the round imprint of a bucket, left to rest on a drying canvas, contributed to the composition of “Vitacress” (1981) and became a recurring device. Bowling began mixing acrylic paint with acrylic gel. This material is similar to acrylic paint, but without the color pigment. Bowling used acrylic gel to extend the volume of paint, create greater texture, and add transparency. Additionally, he used acrylic foam. He cut the material into thin strips, to create linear accents and suggest loosely geometric shapes. He also started to use a range of other materials and objects in his work. He applied metallic pigments, fluorescent chalk, beeswax and glitter to his densely textured surfaces. In several works, found objects such as plastic toys, packing material, the cap of a film canister and oyster shells are embedded within the paint. These items are rarely fully visible but add to the complexity and mysterious quality of his works. In the 1990s, Bowling continued to work with acrylic paint and gel, incorporating different materials and objects into his paintings. His interest in the painting as an object prompted him to stitch canvases together. He started to attach his main canvas to brightly-colored strips of secondary canvas, which created a border. Bowling also began working on smaller paintings. For decades he had mostly worked on a large-scale, so these smaller format works offered a new challenge. Currently, at the age of 85, Bowling still works in his studio every day, he continues to experiment with techniques adopted over many decades, combining them into an infinite number of variations. We can see washes of thin paint, poured paint, blotched paint, stencilled applications, use of acrylic gels, insertion of found objects, and stitching of different sections of canvas. Bowling also continues to explore the two conflicting ideas of geometry and fluidity that have occupied him throughout his career. His compositions are based on overarching structures and loosely geometrical arrangements. At the same time, paint is mixed with a wide range of materials and objects and allowed to flow and spread across the canvas.
Info: Curator: Elena Crippa, Assistant Curator: Laura Castagnini, Tate Britain, Millbank, London, Duration: 31/5-26/8/19, Days & Hours: Daily 10:00-18:00, www.tate.org.uk