Bojewyan Farm

© Estate of Peter Lanyon. All Rights Reserved, DACS 2023.

BOJEWYAN FARMS 1951/52

Peter Lanyon (1918 – 1964)

Details

Dimension
2438 x 1219 mm
Media
OIL ON MASONITE
Accession number
P345

Summary

The abstract landscapes of Peter Lanyon upturn the rigours of perspective, exploiting the colour and tex¬ture of paint to burrow into the gritty layers of mean¬ing present within his native Cornish homeland. Neither scenic nor picturesque nor figurative, Lanyon worked into the paint his emotive engagement with places he knew well, providing immediate portraits of their character that are both tightly lyrical and distinctly raw in their execution. In a talk he gave for the British Council in 1962 about Bojewyan Farms, Lanyon described the ‘bucolic … rather earthy’ scene in the ancient village of Bojewyan, just outside St Just in Cornwall.(1) Lanyon was able to elaborate the complexity of place through the surface of the canvas, evoking something of its character through motifs, gestures and mood. In this way he might be compared to artists such as Paul Nash, Graham Sutherland and Ivor Hitchens, who were seeking to go beyond the mere outward appearance of a setting to communicate what lies behind and within it. In being so strongly tied to one area it would be easy to dismiss Lanyon’s work as parochial, but there is a technical mastery and latent consciousness in the bond he has with Cornwall which evi¬dently goes beyond this, as William Feaver has pointed out: ‘The true landscapist, whether a Constable or a Cézanne, is rarely at home, so to speak, in more than one place. Lose sight of your roots and you become displaced and relatively superficial.’(2)

Lanyon was fortunate to have roots in an area that had, as a result of the onset of war, become one of the main centres of British avant-garde art, with its hub in St Ives. Having briefly attended art schools in Penzance and then the Euston Road School, Lanyon was also fortunate to be taken under the wing of Ben Nicholson, who had moved to the coastal town with his wife, Barbara Hepworth, in 1939. Lanyon’s visual education was interrupted, however, by the outbreak of hostilities, and he served in the RAF for the duration of the Second World War. There is a sense of urgency and an emphasis on sensation that give his paintings an immense charge, a quality no doubt heightened by the experiences and situations encountered while on active service. Most importantly, there is an understanding of the landscape as if from the air (in 1959 he became a gliding enthusiast).

Nicholson had taught Lanyon how to think abstractly in terms of space and form, and how to imbue these with ideas. By the late 1940s and early 1950s, whilst the paintings of St Ives by Nicholson had a certain classical thinness, Lanyon’s resonated a rich energy. During this time, he was starting to see the work of the American Abstract Expressionists, including the mature Willem de Kooning at the Venice Biennale of 1950 and later Jackson Pollock’s One (No. 31) (1950)(3) when it was shown at the ICA in 1953. Andrew Causey has described how Lanyon was able to reinvent him¬self.(4) His introduction to prominent New York artists (he later met Rothko in 1957) undoubtedly opened new possi¬bilities and freedoms in his work, and led to four solo shows there. Lanyon’s career was tragically cut short when he died in a gliding accident in 1964.

RP

1. a reh=”http://collection.britishcouncil. org/html/work/work. aspx?a=1&id=42990&section=/artist/”> www.collection.britishcouncil. org/html/work/work. aspx?a=1&id=42990&section=/artist/ accessed February 2009.
2. William Feaver, ‘Introduction’, in Peter Lanyon and Andrew Lanyon, Cornwall (Penzance: Alison Hodge, 1983), 5.
3. Museum of Modern Art, New York.
4. Andrew Causey, Peter Lanyon (London: Bernard Jacobson, 1991).

Published in Passports British Council Collection, British Council, London 2009

In a recorded talk Lanyon described this work: ‘Bojewyan is a small village near St Just (in the far south west of England), probably one of the most ancient and primitive parts of the district. This isn’t a mining but a farming picture – a bucolic scene rather earthy. It’s also a triptych with three sections to it. On the left there is the sea at the top, and the grass and hayricks. The middle is some sort of animal, even a head, and on the right is the chaff which comes from corn and harvesting. In some ways it is a picture about birth and life and death … Dry stone walls that run round the fields in this part of Cornwall divide up the sections of BoJewyan Farms."

From the text of an illustrated lecture given by the artist for the British Council, 1962.