Open: Tue-Sat 11am-6pm

22 Cork Street, W1S 3NG, London, United Kingdom
Open: Tue-Sat 11am-6pm


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Thu 23 Apr 2026 to Sat 30 May 2026

22 Cork Street, W1S 3NG Roy Oxlade

Tue-Sat 11am-6pm

Artist: Roy Oxlade

Oxlade’s paintings echo the vast, often glorious muddle of our existence…they describe an environment animated by life and, like life, it’s a state that is irreducible: a room can be a cosmos and a prison; an eye, a world and a pin-prick; the body of a beloved, a universe, and a lump of meat.
- Jennifer Higgie, ‘Since Feeling is First’, Roy Oxlade monograph (published April 2026)

Alison Jacques presents a solo exhibition of British painter Roy Oxlade (b.1929, London, d.2014, Kent), spanning 30 years of his practice and featuring many works which have previously not been exhibited. To coincide with the exhibition, the first monograph on Oxlade will be published, with essays by Jennifer Higgie, Barry Schwabsky, an interview with Rose Wylie by Harry Thorne, and artist contributions by Sophie Barber, Alvaro Barrington, Julian Schnabel, Tal R and Clare Woods.

Artworks

Roy Oxlade, Plums, 2005

Acrylic on paper

62 × 83 cm

© Estate of Roy Oxlade. Courtesy Alison Jacques. Photo: Michael Brzezinski
Roy Oxlade, Rose Lying Down, Arms up, with Electric Fire, 1988

Acrylic on paper

62 × 83 cm

© Estate of Roy Oxlade. Courtesy Alison Jacques. Photo: Michael Brzezinski
Roy Oxlade, Rose Lying Down with Arms and Legs Out, 2004

Charcoal, acrylic, crayon on paper

62.5 × 83 cm

© Estate of Roy Oxlade. Courtesy Alison Jacques. Photo: Michael Brzezinski
Roy Oxlade, Pedestal Dish, 1996

Oil on canvas

84 × 104.5 cm

© Estate of Roy Oxlade. Courtesy Alison Jacques. Photo: Michael Brzezinski
Roy Oxlade, Green Leg, 2001

Oil on canvas

122.5 × 102 cm

© Estate of Roy Oxlade. Courtesy Alison Jacques
Roy Oxlade, Black Brushes in a Pot with Two Chairs, c. 2000

Oil on canvas

105 × 125 cm

© Estate of Roy Oxlade. Courtesy Alison Jacques. Photo: Michael Brzezinski
Roy Oxlade, Metaphysical Objects after Holbein, c. 1991

Oil on canvas

125 × 156 cm

© Estate of Roy Oxlade. Courtesy Alison Jacques. Photo: Michael Brzezinski
Roy Oxlade, Two Nudes and Black Spots, c. 1980

Oil on canvas

154 × 124 cm

© Estate of Roy Oxlade. Courtesy Alison Jacques. Photo: Michael Brzezinski
Roy Oxlade, Rose on Chair with Hands Behind Head, 1986

Oil on canvas

154 × 123 cm

© Estate of Roy Oxlade. Courtesy Alison Jacques. Photo: Michael Brzezinski
Roy Oxlade, Reclining Nude, 1982

Oil on canvas

124 × 155 cm

© Estate of Roy Oxlade. Courtesy Alison Jacques. Photo: Michael Brzezinski
Roy Oxlade, Infanta with Black Easel, c. 1989

Oil on canvas

186 × 152 cm

© Estate of Roy Oxlade. Courtesy Alison Jacques. Photo: Michael Brzezinski

Installation Views

Roy Oxlade is often viewed as an ‘artist’s artist’: he was hugely influential as a teacher and writer, as well as a painter. Considered part of the post-Bomberg lineage in British figurative painting, his work persistently challenged the conventions of modern painting and its histories. Oxlade developed an intellectually rigorous and singular visual language rooted in structure, vitality and intuitive mark-making. His work resists categorisation, combining formal experimentation with a sustained enquiry into the conditions of making and seeing. In 2014, The Guardian described Oxlade as ‘one of the most impressive British painters of the past 50 years’.

Oxlade emerged in the 1950s as part of the ‘School of London’, a prominent group of London-based painters alongside Frank Auerbach and Leon Kossoff. Taught by David Bomberg, Oxlade remained true to Bomberg’s values of authenticity in brush marks, developing a practice grounded in direct engagement with the physical world. Domesticity and ritual are central to his practice. His work is inextricably entwined with daily life, which he shared with his wife of 57 years, the artist Rose Wylie. They met as art students at Goldsmiths College and married within a year, living in London and Canada, before eventually settling in Kent until Oxlade’s death in 2014, aged 85. The award-winning documentary, Rose & Roy, an intimate portrait of Oxlade and Wylie’s daily life, directed by Adolfo Doring and Claudia Baez, was first shown at The New York City International Film Festival in 2015.

Oxlade’s cast of recurrent characters for his paintings were the poetry of his everyday life: coffee pots, scissors, lemon squeezers, kitchen knives, paintbrushes, anglepoise lamps, easels and his muse Wylie. For Oxlade, art needed to become more modest, ethically rooted and closely connected to everyday life. Artist Clare Woods highlights Oxlade’s achievement in making ordinary objects ‘feel unfamiliar and create a distance to really see them’, adding that ‘we need this limited yet familiar simplicity and directness to try to understand who we are.’ Jennifer Higgie writes, ‘in many ways, Oxlade’s drawings and paintings embody what we already know: that once we have lived with an object and it moves us, however humble, it becomes almost mystical’. As Oxlade wrote, he believed that art’s role is to transform the mundane: ‘when it succeeds, it moves life up a gear, its effect is to affect; it transcends daily life’.

Roy Oxlade’s first major solo exhibition was in 1963, at the Vancouver Art Gallery, Canada, and key group exhibitions include the John Moores Exhibition at the Walker Art Gallery, Liverpool (1962), the Hayward Annual (1982) and EAST International at Norwich University of the Arts (1991). In 2000, he was included in ‘Not Enough: British Art’ at the Velan Center for Contemporary Art, Turin, and ‘Towards Night’ at the Towner Art Gallery, Eastbourne (2016). Posthumous solo exhibitions include the inaugural exhibition ‘Shine Out Fair Sun’ at Hastings Contemporary, UK (2019). A devoted writer and educator, Oxlade’s legacy continues to resonate across generations of artists working today. He was a regular contributor to prominent arts journals including Modern Painters, Art Monthly and The London Magazine. Oxlade also produced his own publications, Blunt Edge and Blunter Edge (2001–2009). In 2010, Ziggurat Books published Art & Instinct, Selected Writings of Roy Oxlade.

'Roy Oxlade', exhibition view, Alison Jacques, London, 2026. Courtesy Alison Jacques. Photo: Michael Brzezinski

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