Lisa Wright
Pool Paintings
2-31 October 2003
Tuesday to Friday 10 - 5
Saturday 12 - 5
When I first met Lisa Wright she had just won the prestigious Hunting
Art Prize and was preparing for an exhibition in West Cornwall where
she has lived for the past six years. I went to see the work in her
studio at the converted chapel she shares with her painter husband
and their two young children - life and work intermingled, you might
say. It was certainly that way for Lisa Wright, who has always been
a painter involved and engaged with the world that surrounds her.
This symbiosis between work and family life led her paintings to become
concerned with the structures and spaces within her home and the figures
that moved most freely through them - her children.
Working and reworking canvases, domestic contours were abstracted,
muted to become blocks of often sombre colour - a nexus that held
the figures in benign protective custody allowing their small bodies
the freedom to fall, float, sleep or pause in movement with all the
lack of inhibition characteristic of young children. In tandem with
these paintings, a second set of work was developing, one that kept
the same protagonists - the two boys - but followed them away from
the cool recesses of the home to the bright, thrumming world of the
local swimming pool and the other children they would meet there.
From sketches made at the pool-side, Lisa was developing a series
of paintings that explored this brash, new, watery environment and
indulging her enjoyment of the sensuous nature of paint and colour
with a palette enlivened by creamy, effulgent turquoise and vivid
aquamarine. No longer a domestic environment, the pool was still an
interior space providing rectilinear parameters that both enclosed
and framed the action in the water the 'side' around which the children,
delineated in carmine silhouette, clustered like so many tadpoles
or launched themselves away from into a watery freefall of splashing
arms and legs. They were exciting paintings and they were what convinced
the Hunting Prize judges to make Lisa Wright this year's winner.
In her most recent paintings, the ones in this exhibition, Lisa continues
to focus on figures in and around the pool, developing and embracing
a theme that is paying massive dividends in terms of the work it has
produced. In this series we sense a painter fully engaged with her
subject matter - the initial exploratory mark-making giving way to
a bolder more confident enjoyment of each scene. Larger canvases allow
her the space to extend her painterly vocabulary as she explores the
artificial brilliance of the swimming pool with its limpid depths
and restless surface where that most heady and compelling mix - air
water and light - meet to dance in a stand-off of refractive confrontation.
In some paintings the figurative elements are little more than suggestions,
sub-mariners whose passage through this interface is marked by a plume
of displaced H2O, at other times they are caught and truncated by
its pincer like grip. When the figures move to the edge and emerge
or stand on the side in that frisson of uncertainty before jumping
in, we see draughtsmanship at its best. They are more fleshed out
than before, more naturalistic and, though never portraits as such
- the ubiquitous goggles keeping facial characteristics invariably
uniform - there is an emotional cohesiveness between the groups of
children, discernable through their body language, which marks a new
and important dimension in these paintings.
What Lisa Wright is not, or is unlikely ever to be, is a painter of
cosy domestic scenes or childhood idylls. The years spent with the
children, watching them growing up, sketching them and using these
sketches as an impetus for painting, has enabled her to create work
which takes her forward as an artist. As this series of 'Pool Paintings'
demonstrates, she has a rare ability to work figuratively within an
abstract idiom, one from which Lisa Wright is able to create some
of her best work.
Pip Palmer 2003
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