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Summer Exhibition 2009 Obituary
of Morris Kestelman by Agi Katz from the Independent Newspaper 18 June
1998 ALTHOUGH
FOR the last 35 years Morris Kestelman concentrated on abstract
painting, he is probably best known for his depictions of French
peasants, Spanish fishermen, circus artistes, and beautifully composed
landscapes where light and shade alternate in playful, subtle games. The
solidity of his figures and his emphasis on movement gave his work a
strong affinity with that of Bernard Meninsky, one of his teachers,
while with Josef Herman he shared an interest in people at work and the
rhythm of their bodies, echoed by shapes in the surrounding landscape. These
paintings and drawings from the mid-Forties to the mid-Fifties have a
pleasing directness and convey his love of landscape in the luscious
blues, vivid ochres and greens of the |
Click on small image for full details of work Please email info@hgsummershow.org or call 020 7275 0383 for further information. |
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Morris
Kestelman's first exhibition at the Boundary Gallery in What
happened, as Kestelman himself said, was that he came to the end of his
figurative vocabulary. His abstract compositions were always carefully
planned and within a narrow range of warm colours. Texture assumed a new
importance, with powerful brushwork and several layers of thinly applied
paint, thereby creating a strong sense of depth. In
their expressive distortions and superimposed images his abstract
paintings contain echoes of his work as a student in the Twenties. In
fact what made Kestelman such an interesting and good artist was that he
never stopped experimenting. Morris
Kestelman had an inauspicious start for an artist - his parents were
immigrants from In
1922 he gained a scholarship to the Central School of Art where he first
met Bernard Meninsky, who taught him everything he knew about drawing;
and later the teacher/student relationship developed into a firm
friendship. It was through Meninsky that Kestelman got involved with the
avant-garde London Group - he helped organise their 1926 exhibition in
which Epstein, Bomberg, Matthew Smith, Sickert, Roger Fry and Vanessa
Bell all took part. He was elected to the group in 1951. Among
his fellow students were Barnett Freedman, James Fitton and the
illustrator James Boswell. Among his teachers were William Roberts and
A.S. Hartrick, who had known Van Gogh and Cezanne and who was perhaps
responsible for awakening Kestelman's passion for French painting and
for France herself which - except for the war years - he visited
annually for extended periods from 1930 onwards. During his first visit
he stayed in the same studio as Chaim Soutine had many years earlier, in
Cagnes- sur-Mer. Kestelman's
art training continued at the Royal College of Art, where his interest
in theatre and costume design was aroused. His first attempt in this
field was for The Magic Flute, performed at Another
aspect of his theatre work came about in 1937 when he was commissioned
by Noel Carrington to illustrate a book on the circus. In a typically
thorough way, Kestelman watched as many performances of the Bertram
Mills Circus as he could. The results are a series of beautifully
finished, concise pastel drawings covering every facet of circus
performances. These were sadly never published because of the outbreak
of war. The originals - more than a hundred of them, and Kestelman's
best-selling works - are all dispersed. Last year the Boundary Gallery
published four selected circus images in a limited edition print for his
92nd birthday. During
the war he applied himself with the same thoroughness to his studies of
work in an aircraft repair factory; the resulting drawings are
comparable to Henry Moore's Tube shelter sleepers. Kestelman
was always sad that his abstract work never achieved the same response
as his figurative work, and nothing gave him greater pleasure than the
wonderful notice he received in the Royal Academy's illustrated
catalogue last year, where it was stated that if one artist were to be
be singled out from the whole exhibition, it would be Kestelman - his
four paintings in the show were all abstract works! However,
Kestelman is unclassifiable in both periods of his career. He was a
contemporary of John Craxton, John Minton, Michael Ayrton, Keith
Vaughan, Robert Colquhoun and Robert MacBryde, yet Kestelman is less
famous than any of them. He is one of the group of British artists who
are not known sufficiently. He
was engaged in teaching throughout his working life, starting at
Wimbledon School of Art and ending up as Head of Painting and Sculpture
at the Central School of Art from 1951 to 1971. He exerted enormous
influence on two generations of artists and was also greatly respected
as an authority on painting. In 1956 he served with Herbert Read on the
jury for the Guggenheim International Painting Award in the Though
his teaching was full-time, and he was only able to paint during the
holidays, such an arrangement allowed him to follow his own path, and to
change style in the middle of his artistic career. Kestelman
only had nine solo exhibitions throughout his long 70-year career; all
were at different galleries except the last three which took place at
the Boundary Gallery, in 1989, 1993 and 1995. It took some considerable
persuasion to convince him to agree to the first at my (then) new
gallery. It was an enormous success. We developed a good working
relationship as well as a warm friendship. Morris
Kestelman was a charming, erudite man. He was also incredibly well-read
(in French as well as English) and his capacity to enjoy life was
boundless except for the last 15 months, after the death of his wife.
His philosophy of art had always been "to revel in the sunny side
of life . . . heaven knows we all need the solace we can get from
art." Morris Kestelman, artist: born London 5 October 1905; Head of Painting and Sculpture School, Central School of Art 1951-71; RA 1996; married 1936 Dorothy Creagh (died 1997; one daughter); died London 15 June 1998. |
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