VIEW INSIDE A CAVE 1965
Patrick Caulfield (1936 – 2005)
Details
- Dimension
- 1220 X 2134 MM
- Media
- ALKYD ON HARDBOARD
- Accession number
- P1241
Summary
At over two metres across, View Inside a Cave has its mouth wide open; the viewer’s eye is swallowed by an even expanse of two-tone grey, guided by cartographical lines around the path’s swerve to the right. As Marco Livingstone remarks, ‘One can¬not fail to be reminded of the simple perspectival devices featured in how-to-draw manuals.’(1) Early on, as a student, Patrick Caulfield made the impersonal surface and graphic outline – the stuff of a million billboards – his particular hallmark: ‘This was my reaction against the Englishness of English painting which so greatly valued a slightly understated, tentative figuration.’(2)
View Inside a Cave joins a series of paintings from Caulfield’s years immediately after the Royal College of Art, all done in an ostenta¬tiously landscape format and given the prefix ‘View’. A partly ironic title, he confirmed, as it was precisely the ‘flat shadowless manner that denied the recessive expectations of a view’.(30 In these paintings, Caulfield cocks a snook at the institutionalised plein-air by seeking the nearest thing to indoors, from View of the Ruins (1964)(4) and View of the Rooftops (1965)(5)to the snug boltholes Insiide a Weekend Cabin and Inside a Swiss Chalet(both 1969).(6) An urban aesthetic of street signs and natty packaging is transferred out of town. Experience tells, from an early job in the design department of Crosse & Blackwell and a term in the commercial art department at Chelsea School of Art, which equipped Caulfield with armaments against the ‘misty brush strokes’ that prevailed in academic art of the time. ‘It seemed a reason to use very crisp black lines.’(7)
The black lines that so clean up the cave’s crags and gravel can also be related to Caulfield’s first trip abroad, to Crete in the summer between leaving Chelsea and starting at the RCA. He was wowed by the liberally restored palace at Knossos, where ‘the terracotta red and black contrasts seemed Japanese or at least oriental; the vivid¬ness of colour and sharp contours struck me quite forcibly’.(8) Caulfield had a magpie eye for the vivid, and ‘crude’ Touristico postcards were as exciting as Fernand Léger’s bold objects or Hergé’s Adventures of Tintin. It was this embrace of visual sources high and low that saw him lumped with the Pop movement – a cause of irritation to Caulfield, who maintained his work shared none of Pop’s ‘social realism’.
In View Inside a Caveexactitude combines with an absence of detail to create an enveloping atmosphere by disarmingly economic means. Indeed Christopher Finch’s memorable phrase for Caulfield – ‘a romantic disarmed by his own irony’ – directs our attention to the poetry of Jules Laforgue.(9) Caulfield, a fan since college days, uses words such as ‘succinct’, ‘condensed’, ‘crisp’, and ‘pungent’ to describe Laforgue’s imagery, words that equally apply to his own.(10) Nowhere more so than in his treatment of the cave, a subject not without weighty precedent. A century before, Gustave Courbet had confronted the refined style and strictures on subject matter that ruled academic painting with his fantastically crusty caves, such as Grotto of Sarrazine (1864),(11) where the paint is almost sculpted, and the cave’s mouth curls round like an Atlantic breaker, affirming the concrete reality of an empty landscape. As if in subdued reference, Caulfield chooses to paint on the slightly rougher reverse side of the hardboard. He has put both subject and style through the refinery, distilling the atmosphere of emptiness. Graceful, raffish even, View Inside a Cave leads us on. Behind it, echoes of man’s primeval art; ahead, we can only guess the next frame.
DF
1. Marco Livingstone, ‘Perspectives on Painting: Seven essays on the art of Patrick Caulfield’, in Patrick Caulfield, exh. cat. (London: Hayward Gallery, 1999), 13.
2. Caulfield in dialogue with Bryan Robertson, in Patrick Caulfield (1999), 24.
3. Letter from Caulfield to Andrea Rose (March 1990), quoted in For a Wider World: Sixty Works from the British Council Collection, exh. cat. (London: British Council, 1990), 88.
4. Private collection.
5. Private collection.
6. Manchester Art Gallery, and Museo Nacional de Arte Reina Sofia, Madrid, respectively.
7. Caulfield quoted in Marco Livingstone, Patrick Caulfield: Paintings (Aldershot & Burlington: Lund Humphries, 2005), 19. 8. Dialogue with Bryan Robertson, 25. 9. Christopher Finch, ‘The Paintings of Patrick Caulfield’, Art International (20 January 1966), 49.
10. Dialogue with Bryan Robertson, 28.
11. The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles.
Published in Passports British Council Collection, British Council, London 2009
Glossary
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Design
The arrangement of elements or details in an artefact or a work of art.
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Landscape
Landscape is one of the principle genres of Western art. In early paintings the landscape was a backdrop for the composition, but in the late 17th Century the appreciation of nature for its own sake began with the French and Dutch painters (from whom the term derived). Their treatment of the landscape differed: the French tried to evoke the classical landscape of ancient Greece and Rome in a highly stylised and artificial manner; the Dutch tried to paint the surrounding fields, woods and plains in a more realistic way. As a genre, landscape grew increasing popular, and by the 19th Century had moved away from a classical rendition to a more realistic view of the natural world. Two of the greatest British landscape artists of that time were John Constable and JMW Turner, whose works can be seen in the Tate collection (www.tate.org.uk). There can be no doubt that the evolution of landscape painting played a decisive role in the development of Modernism, culminating in the work of the Impressionists and Post-Impressionists . Since then its demise has often been predicted and with the rise of abstraction, landscape painting was thought to have degenerated into an amateur pursuit. However, landscape persisted in some form into high abstraction, and has been a recurrent a theme in most of the significant tendencies of the 20th Century. Now manifest in many media, landscape no longer addresses solely the depiction of topography, but encompasses issues of social, environmental and political concern.
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Painting
Work of art made with paint on a surface. Often the surface, also called a support, is a tightly stretched piece of canvas, paper or a wooden panel. Painting involves a wide range of techniques and materials, along with the artist's intellectual concerns effecting the content of a work.