Roger Hilton British, 1911-1975
‘Oct
‘64’ was painted at the height of Hilton’s career and at a time when Hilton was
being fully recognised as one of the most radical and inventive leading
exponents of abstract art in Britain. Having been taken on by Leslie Waddington
in 1959, he then went on to win first prize at the John Moore’s exhibition in
1963 and in the same year that this work was painted he won the UNESCO prize at
the Venice Biennale.
Hilton is often considered a Cornish Artist, but he was arguably one of the
most European artists of his generation. Unlike many of his contemporaries, he
had engaged with, but was not consumed by, the dialogue with American
abstraction. Having lived and studied in France before the outbreak of war, he
continued to visit regularly and was immersed in the abstract-figurative
dialogue of the Ecole de Paris. By 1960 he had arrived at a language of organic
abstraction which showed a continued negotiation between abstraction and
figuration but also the importance of drawing through his varied mark making
and use of the charcoal line.
His paintings from this time are not about the narrative but rather the paint
itself. In this work the simple compositional arrangements belie the
consideration that has gone into the juxtaposition, layering and exposed traces
of underpainting. The painting gives the impression of spontaneity and although
Hilton painted in quick short bursts, there was much contemplation and
deliberation about his next move – every gesture in a Hilton painting is
deliberate, considered and made to count. Andrew Lambirth has written of how
‘Hilton’s mature style intentionally brought the notion of the sketch to the
finished picture, thus generating a new immediacy in the work’ (Lambirth 2017).
It was this unique style of blending apparent control with uninhibited
spontaneity that projected Hilton onto the international stage, leaving him
with a reputation as one of the most innovative and exciting artists of
Post-War Britain.
Provenance
Artists EstatePrivate collection, UK
Exhibitions
Jonathan Clark Fine Art, London, Roger Hilton 'OI YOI YOI', 2000, no.36Private collection, UK