Claerwen James
Girl with Pale Hair 4, 2014
London, Cork Street

Claerwen James

19 March - 18 April 2015
/

Overview

Flowers Gallery is pleased to present an exhibition of new work by Claerwen James. A catalogue with a foreword by New Yorker critic Adam Gopnik will accompany the exhibition.

Claerwen James is known for her painted portraits of young female subjects, which explore the private moments captured by photographic snapshots. By painting directly from photographs, James keeps a deliberate distance between herself and the sitter, in order to observe more closely what may be simultaneously revealed and withheld within the frozen moment in time.

James's photographic sources vary from family pictures and photographs taken by the artist herself, to anonymous images, sourced from car boot sales, junk shops, the pages of magazines and from film stills. In all cases, they are not portraits in the usual sense of the word. The identity of each sitter is either unknown or irrelevant to James, who scours the images for a particular quality or presence held within the image itself - a self-contained narrative forever separated from the flow.

Quietly enigmatic, the sitters gaze outwards towards an unseen photographer. Her subjects - girls and young women, whose beings are in a continual state of transformation - invite the viewer's interpretation of their narratives to extend both before and after the photographic event.  As James says:

"Thresholds of one kind or another are approaching. Perhaps they are here. Perhaps they are already past. A photograph is fraught with the sense of time passing - the impassable gulf between that instant and this. Unfulfilled potential and paths not taken."

James cites Corot, Degas and early Picasso as unfailing sources of ideas and provocations, and in several new works this influence is made explicit by the appropriation of their subject matter. Girl without a Basket of Flowerspays homage to Picasso's paintingYoung girl with a basket of flowers, 1905, refiguring the child's awkward posture and brooding countenance in its present day incarnation:Girl without a Basket of Flowers 2.

Two paintings featuring older female subjects Visitation 1 (After Raverat)  and Visitation 2 (still from a short film by C.B.), which refers to a film by Cordelia Beresford, convey their tenderness by a strikingly simple arrangement of shapes and subdued tones. In both, James was drawn to the two female protagonists, who are involved intensely in one another and the present moment they inhabit. 

James's minimal reduction of the image reflects the fragmented nature of the photographed subject; backgrounds are replaced by atmospheric voids, tell-tale signs of clothing are flattened, and colours are muted. In 2006, Francis Spufford wrote: "All the emotional work of the painting has gone into modelling as distinct and economical a sense as possible of the measure of what vanished with the original moment: into a tender and disturbing statement of what gets lost with lost time."

Newsletter signup

Get our newsletter including exhibitions, news and events
We will process the personal data you have supplied in accordance with our privacy policy. You can unsubscribe or change your preferences at any time by clicking the link in any emails.
    Close

    Your saved list

    Create a list of works then send us an enquiry.
    No items found