Tag: artinlondon

  • Reflections of Movement

    In the “Lines of Feeling” section of the National Portrait Gallery in London, two drawings – full of movement, energy and feeling – stand out with dynamic lines and emotional impact.

    On one hand, “Study of John” (2010) by Jenny Saville. On the other, “Richard Nicoll” (2016) by Howard Tangye. Both artworks show a drawing of a seated man; one older, one younger, respectively. Both are the centre point of focus, with no additional images or colours on the background. Although drawn with quick, sketch-like lines, both pieces explore a level of emotion that reflects a fleeting moment.

    Saville, whose artistic practice has been described as “reinventing figure painting for contemporary art”, invokes her deep fascination for the extremities of anatomy, focusing with greater detail on the features of the face and the hands of the subject. Her study, painted with black charcoal over a stained-aged piece of parchment, shows an anatomically more detailed image of a man sitting on an armed chair, surrounded by additional lines that represent the remnants of what was his previous pose. A peaceful, yet dynamic expression of his movements during the sitting. Unlike Saville’s, the drawing of the figurative abstract artist Howard Tangye includes some layers of colour, while also exploring the essence of the subject through his movement – perhaps even his feelings – during the sitting. The portrait of the late Richard Nicoll presents him in two calm, meditative overlayered poses. With his eyes closed, his hands with fingers intertwined on his lap, one outline shows him with his legs separated and his head hanging down (as if asleep), while the other shows a more active posture, immersed in thought, with his right ankle over his left knee. The quiet yet colourful image – contrasting with Saville’s monochromatic work – almost seems to reflect with this movement of the lines the taciturn mood of the subject.

    Both artworks proclaim a level of emotion and engagement in the present moment that immerse the viewer, almost as if they were attending that precise sitting, seeing the subject move, act, and feel while the artists expertly outline the reflections of their movements on to the canvases.