Open: Mon-Fri 10am-6pm

32 East 57th, 2nd Floor, NY 10022, New York, United States
Open: Mon-Fri 10am-6pm


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Hugo Grenville: Recent Works

Findlay Galleries, New York

Wed 25 Sep 2024 to Wed 6 Nov 2024

32 East 57th, 2nd Floor, NY 10022 Hugo Grenville: Recent Works

Mon-Fri 10am-6pm

Artist: Hugo Grenville

Artworks

Hugo Grenville

Oil on canvas

30 × 50 in

Hugo Grenville

Oil on canvas

60 × 30 in

Hugo Grenville

Oil on canvas

60 × 48 in

Hugo Grenville

Oil on canvas

34 × 36 in

Hugo Grenville

Oil on canvas

30 × 30 in

Hugo Grenville

Oil on canvas

42 × 32 in

Hugo Grenville

Oil on canvas

46 × 38 in

Hugo Grenville

Oil on canvas

48 × 48 in

Hugo Grenville

Oil on canvas

42 × 60 in

Hugo Grenville

Oil on canvas

46 × 38 in

Hugo Grenville

Oil on canvas

46 × 38 in

Hugo Grenville

Oil on canvas

34 × 42 in

Hugo Grenville

Oil on canvas

42 × 42 in

Hugo Grenville

Oil on canvas

36 × 34 in

Hugo Grenville

Oil on canvas

36 × 34 in

Hugo Grenville

Oil on canvas

48 × 54 in

Hugo Grenville

Oil on canvas

46 × 38 in

Hugo Grenville

Oil on canvas

28 × 36 in

Hugo Grenville

Oil on canvas

50 × 30 in

Hugo Grenville

Oil on canvas

42 × 32 in

Hugo Grenville

Oil on canvas

42 × 32 in

Artist Statement

This collection is an exploration of the way in which colour influences our feelings. We live surrounded by colour, in our homes, in the landscape, and perhaps at work too, but seldom do we have time to stop and consider its effect upon us. Why does a room observed in the blue-violet light of a summer dawn suggest a very different atmosphere to the same room lit by the golden light of a summer evening?
As humans, we respond to colour from an early age, preferring a red shirt to a green one or a yellow one to a pink one. Colour works like music: it instantaneously chimes with our feelings and moods. Certain combinations evoke pleasure, others distaste. In this group of new paintings, I have used colour as one might use a key in music, as a way of setting the emotional tone of a composition, of communicating something inner through the arrangement of its harmonies.

As with all my work, the paintings seek to convey a spirit of contemplation, reflection and gentle joy found in the world around us, our houses, the streets of our hometowns, and the countryside.
I am much moved by looking through windows, and many of the room interiors are designed to lead the viewer’s eye through the careful arrangement of shapes and into the outside world; sometimes, this device has the effect of cloaking the ordinary in a sort of otherworldliness so that the mind can wander freely into the pastures of the imagination. There is a similar effect where a mirror is used to reflect the figure: the interior space presented to the viewer presents an alternative version of reality, a kind of dreamworld, an Alice through the Looking-Glass experience.

The paintings largely fall into two groups: the landscapes composed from the terrace at Old Granary Cottage, my home, and the interiors, some with figures, designed in my studio. Although my vision is rooted in the tradition of English Romanticism, the way in which the paint is deployed is influenced both by a long immersion in European Post-Impressionism and by my more recent fascination with American Post-war painting. In the bigger pictures, the juxtaposition of flat and liquid areas of translucent colour, applied in fluid broad brush marks, with shorter, thicker impasto marks, probably owes more to the technique of de Kooning than it does to Matisse, even if the subject matter remains firmly domestic.

Hugo Grenville

Recognized today as one of Britain’s leading artists, Hugo Grenville served as a soldier and then an art dealer before dedicating himself full-time to painting in 1989. He has had many solo exhibitions since his first in London in 1974, and his work can be found in many public and private collections internationally.

Grenville refers to himself as a romantic but acknowledges a fascination with pattern and color that places him in the tradition of Matisse. The figures and the everyday objects that surround them in his paintings express joy in life, light and color. Less evident, but equally important, is a feeling of intimacy that recalls Henri Matisse’s contemporaries, Pierre Bonnard and Edouard Vuillard. It is here that we see Grenville being influenced by the principles of Les Nabis - a group of young post-impressionists, avant-garde Parisian artists of the 1890s who influenced the fine arts at the turn of the century. One of the goals of Les Nabis was to integrate daily life into their paintings as we see Grenville doing with such grace and sensitivity. The Nabis approach to cover a flat surface with colors assembled in a certain order is another principal Grenville follows. Layers of feeling peel back to disclose a spiritual intensity.

Grenville says, “My paintings are an unashamed and joyous celebration of life, a passionate defense of beauty and domestic harmony, steeped in the English Romantic tradition. I would like the work to stand as a symbol of promise and to express our sense of existence through the recognition of the transforming power of color and light.

Through the arrangement of shape, line, pattern, and color, I try to conjure the lyrical and the dreamlike, a place at peace with itself. The still-life and figure paintings do not generally represent a moment in time but rather the result of reflection, recollection, and reinvention, a distillation of human experience.”

all images © the gallery and the artist(s)

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