Jump to content

Adrian Morris: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
AnomieBOT (talk | contribs)
Fixing reference errors
Citation bot (talk | contribs)
Removed parameters. | Use this bot. Report bugs. | #UCB_CommandLine
 
(47 intermediate revisions by 21 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{short description|English painter}}
[[File:Adrian Morris (2).jpg|thumb|Adrian Morris.]]
{{about|the painter Adrian Morris|the actor|Adrian Morris (actor)}}


{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2022}}
'''Adrian Grant Morris''' (May 18, 1929 in [[London]], [[England]] December 6, 2004 also in London) was an [[England|English]] painter.<ref>{{cite news| first=David | last=Buckman | newspaper=[[The Independent]] | title=Adrian Morris: Painstaking painter who exhibited rarely | date=17 December 2004 }}</ref>
[[File:Adrian Morris (2).jpg|thumb|Adrian Morris]]
'''Adrian Grant Morris''' (18 May 1929 – 6 December 2004) was an [[England|English]] painter.<ref>{{cite news| first=David | last=Buckman | newspaper=[[The Independent]] | title=Adrian Morris: Painstaking painter who exhibited rarely |url=https://www.independent.co.uk/news/obituaries/adrian-morris-691439.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20091004102718/http://www.independent.co.uk/news/obituaries/adrian-morris-691439.html |archive-date=2009-10-04 |url-access=limited |url-status=live| date=17 December 2004 }}</ref>


==Early life==
==Background and education==
Morris spent his childhood in rural [[Somerset]] before the family moved to the [[USA]], where he attended the progressive [[Putney School]] in Vermont. There his precocious talent for painting, inspired by the surrealists in New York, was given full rein. On his return to the UK in 1947, after completion of National Service in the army and spells at art schools in London ([[Anglo-French Art Centre]]) and [[Paris]] ([[L'Académie de la Grande Chaumière]]), he finished his art education at the [[Royal Academy Schools]].
Morris was born in [[London]], England. He spent his childhood in rural [[Somerset]] before the family moved to the United States, where he attended the progressive [[Putney School]] in [[Vermont]]. There his precocious talent for painting, inspired by the surrealists in New York, was given full rein. On his return to the UK in 1947, after completion of National Service in the army and spells at art schools in London ([[Anglo-French Art Centre]]) and [[Paris]] (L'Académie de la Grande Chaumière), he finished his art education at the [[Royal Academy Schools]].


==Career==
==Career==
[[File:MorrisA.jpg|thumb|Adrian Morris's 1978 presentation in the Hayward Annual in London]]
Although a dedicated painter all his life, Morris was reserved in showing his work, but over the years from the mid Fifties he did exhibit at a number of leading London galleries, including The Leicester, St. George's and The Hanover. The Hayward Gallery showed sixteen of his works in their Annual '78, alongside artists including [[Sandra Blow]], [[Elizabeth Frink]], and [[Stephen Cox (sculptor)|Stephen Cox]]. He sketched ideas for paintings at every opportunity, especially when he was away from his studio, teaching. Dominating themes were the earth, its vulnerability to both natural and man-made disasters and the effect on its inhabitants.
Although a dedicated painter all his life, Morris was reserved in showing his work, but over the years from the mid-'50s he did exhibit at a number of leading London galleries, including the Leicester, St. George's and the Hanover. The Hayward Gallery showed sixteen of his works in their Annual '78, alongside artists including [[Mary Kelly (artist)|Mary Kelly]], [[Liliane Lijn]], [[Rita Donagh]], [[Elisabeth Frink]] and [[Marc Camille Chaimowicz]]. He sketched ideas for paintings at every opportunity, especially when he was away from his studio, teaching. Dominating themes were the earth, its vulnerability to both natural and man-made disasters and the effect on its inhabitants.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Kent|first=Sarah|title=Hayward Annual '78 Catalogue|publisher=Hayward Gallery|year=1978|location=London|pages=18–19}}</ref>


Morris was inspired in the 1960s by the [[NASA]] space exploration programme and the views of distant, barren terrain seen through a spacecraft hatch. Although figures, such as astronauts, refugees, wounded soldiers and poor rural workers, feature strongly in preliminary sketches, they seldom survive into the finished works - as William Packer observed in The Times, the figures had gone ''"leaving a space or structure in which a figure indeed might be, but as an implicit presence"''. These, typically, are painted in oil on gessoed panels, which are pared down to the minimum, every square inch minutely considered.
Morris was inspired in the 1960s by the [[NASA]] space exploration programme and the views of distant, barren terrain seen through a spacecraft hatch. Although figures, such as astronauts, refugees, wounded soldiers and poor rural workers, feature strongly in preliminary sketches, they seldom survive into the finished works - as William Packer observed in ''[[The Times]]'', the figures had gone ''"leaving a space or structure in which a figure indeed might be, but as an implicit presence"''. These, typically, are painted in oil on gessoed panels, which are pared down to the minimum, every square inch minutely considered.<ref>{{Cite news|last=Packer|first=William|date=4 January 2005|title=Adrian Morris: Obituary|work=The Times|url=https://adrianmorris.info/2005-William-Packer-for-The-Times/}}</ref>


==Selected exhibitions==
==Exhibitions and critical opinion==
The Redfern Gallery, London staged a retrospective of Morris’s work in May/June, 2008 and a further one-man show, focussing on his drawings, was held at the gallery in June/July, 2010. His work was included in several group shows at the Redfern, including Aspects of Landscape in 2014.<ref>{{Cite web|title=Exhibitions: Past|url=https://www.redfern-gallery.com/exhibitions/|url-status=live|access-date=10 March 2021|website=The Redfern Gallery|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190501182358/https://www.redfern-gallery.com/exhibitions/ |archive-date=2019-05-01 }}</ref>
Following a retrospective exhibition at the [[Redfern Gallery]] in London in May/June, 2008, works were included in their mixed Autumn Exhibition, 2009,.{{citation needed|date=August 2012}} The gallery mounted a further one-man show of his paintings and works on paper from 8 June to 29 July 2010, and his works have featured in several group show at the Redfern Gallery subsequently: Landscape 2012; The Redfern Gallery at 90, 2013; and Aspects of Landscape, 2014.


In the following years his work was rediscovered and championed by younger generations of artists. New Foundations, a one-man show of paintings was held at [https://42carltonplace.com 42 Carlton Place], Glasgow in September/October 2015.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://42carltonplace.com/adrianmorris/|title=Adrian Morris: New Foundations, 42 Carlton Place, September-October 2015}}</ref> A two-person show, with [[Carol Rhodes]], was mounted in [[Balfron Tower]], London in May, 2016.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://ldnldn.london/ADRIAN_MORRIS_CAROL_RHODES.html|title=Adrian Morris and Carol Rhodes, London Gallery, May 2016}}</ref> A solo show was held at [http://3236rls.com 3236RLS Le Bourgeois], London in November/ December 2018.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://3236rls.com/AdrianMorris.html|title=Adrian Morris, 3236RLS Le Bourgeois, November - December 2018}}</ref>
"''Morris's work speaks directly of the anxieties and hopes we now harbour about our planet's state in the twenty-first century. There is an impressive level of consistency and rigour running through his mature output. It amounts to a formidable corpus of work. The paintings' austere, hard-won and, above all precient eloquence deserves to be recognised today"''.<ref>{{cite book| first=Richard | last=Cork | authorlink=Richard Cork | title=Exhibition catalogue | year=2008 }}</ref>


In March/April 2019 a major solo exhibition of Morris was held in Galerie Neu, Berlin and his work was included in their Art Basel presentation of that year.<ref>{{Cite web|title=Adrian Morris at Galerie Neu|url=http://www.galerieneu.net/exhibition/a-selection-by-tenzing-barshee}}</ref>
♦ ''"A distinctive and distinguished painter, his work is elusive of category, its own thing, minimal rather than minimalist, abstracted rather than abstract, worked always with a scrupulous address to the matter of the painting, not just as an image but as a thing"''.<ref>{{cite news| first=William | last=Packer | newspaper=[[The Times]] | year= 2005 }}</ref>


In March 2020 a solo exhibition of Morris’s work opened at Essex Street gallery in New York. The exhibition was closed due to the Covid19 pandemic and reopened in July for a final week.<ref>{{Cite web|title=Essex Street gallery|url=https://www.essexstreet.biz/exhibition/145}}</ref>
♦ ''"Adrian Morris's work cannot easily be located in contemporary art...This image of pioneering work in remote places often acts as a metaphor of exploration into the mental or physical unknown or as the artist described it: 'Journeying out into space as far as the mind can go and one can physically follow, while at the same time retaining one's rots in the earth — man must and will migrate further'"''.<ref>{{cite book| first=Sarah | last=Kent | title=Hayward Annual '78 catalogue | year=1978 }}</ref>


== Website ==
''"The images are tense and still, the paint rubbed into the gesso, layer on layer until it seems to become the material it depicts, metal and sand, amplifying the disquiet...Morris's imagery leads us to infer a somehow sacrosanct 'humanist' or 'existential' content''.<ref>{{cite news| first=Adrian | last=Searle | title=Art Scribe | year=1978 }}</ref>
The Estate of Adrian Morris created the website [https://adrianmorris.info adrianmorris.info] in July 2020.


== Critical reception ==
==References==
* "''Morris's work speaks directly of the anxieties and hopes we now harbour about our planet's state in the 21st century. There is an impressive level of consistency and rigour running through his mature output. It amounts to a formidable corpus of work. The paintings' austere, hard-won and, above all precient eloquence deserves to be recognised today"''.<ref>{{cite book| first=Richard | last=Cork | author-link=Richard Cork | title=Exhibition catalogue | year=2008 }}</ref>
*''"The images are tense and still, the paint rubbed into the gesso, layer on layer until it seems to become the material it depicts, metal and sand, amplifying the disquiet...Morris's imagery leads us to infer a somehow sacrosanct 'humanist' or 'existential' content''.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Searle|first=Adrian|date=1978|title=Hayward Review|journal=Artscribe}}</ref>
*''"Adrian Morris was one who understood that interesting painting must be at once concrete and mimetic, a matter of both surface and survey. His signature device of a visual aperture or hatch opening onto flat planes (plains) asserts that painting—pace formalist dogma—is always a window onto a world of illusions. Yet it also reiterates artifice, the presence of the painted panel itself. A compacted, burnished impasto fuses the frame with what is within and beyond. The terrain depicted is synonymous with the painting “ground.”'' <ref>{{Cite web|url=http://moussemagazine.it/adrian-morris-merlin-james-2019/|title=Space Explorations: Adrian Morris •|date=2019-05-07|website=Mousse Magazine|language=en|access-date=2020-01-31}}</ref>
*''"The paintings in their emptiness emanate light. They are pared back, unpopulated by people, with a stillness that seems to express a deep sense of geological time. They are concerned with viewing – how we view – the frailty of the earth and the vulnerability of the planet.”'' <ref>{{Cite journal|last=Sturgis|first=Daniel|author-link=Daniel Sturgis|url=http://contemporary.burlington.org.uk/reviews/reviews/adrian-morris|title=Burlington Contemporary - Reviews - Adrian Morris|website=contemporary.burlington.org.uk|language=en|access-date=2020-01-31}}</ref>

== References ==
{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}


{{Authority control|VIAF=41650908}}
{{Authority control}}


{{Persondata <!-- Metadata: see [[Wikipedia:Persondata]]. -->
| NAME = Morris, Adrian
| ALTERNATIVE NAMES =
| SHORT DESCRIPTION = Painter
| DATE OF BIRTH = May 18, 1929
| PLACE OF BIRTH = [[London]], [[England]]
| DATE OF DEATH = December 6, 2004
| PLACE OF DEATH = London
}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Morris, Adrian}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Morris, Adrian}}
[[Category:1929 births]]
[[Category:1929 births]]
Line 41: Line 43:
[[Category:Painters from London]]
[[Category:Painters from London]]
[[Category:20th-century English painters]]
[[Category:20th-century English painters]]
[[Category:English male painters]]
[[Category:21st-century English painters]]
[[Category:21st-century English painters]]
[[Category:Guggenheim Fellows]]
[[Category:The Putney School alumni]]
[[Category:20th-century English male artists]]
[[Category:21st-century English male artists]]

Latest revision as of 22:25, 27 September 2023

Adrian Morris

Adrian Grant Morris (18 May 1929 – 6 December 2004) was an English painter.[1]

Early life[edit]

Morris was born in London, England. He spent his childhood in rural Somerset before the family moved to the United States, where he attended the progressive Putney School in Vermont. There his precocious talent for painting, inspired by the surrealists in New York, was given full rein. On his return to the UK in 1947, after completion of National Service in the army and spells at art schools in London (Anglo-French Art Centre) and Paris (L'Académie de la Grande Chaumière), he finished his art education at the Royal Academy Schools.

Career[edit]

Adrian Morris's 1978 presentation in the Hayward Annual in London

Although a dedicated painter all his life, Morris was reserved in showing his work, but over the years from the mid-'50s he did exhibit at a number of leading London galleries, including the Leicester, St. George's and the Hanover. The Hayward Gallery showed sixteen of his works in their Annual '78, alongside artists including Mary Kelly, Liliane Lijn, Rita Donagh, Elisabeth Frink and Marc Camille Chaimowicz. He sketched ideas for paintings at every opportunity, especially when he was away from his studio, teaching. Dominating themes were the earth, its vulnerability to both natural and man-made disasters and the effect on its inhabitants.[2]

Morris was inspired in the 1960s by the NASA space exploration programme and the views of distant, barren terrain seen through a spacecraft hatch. Although figures, such as astronauts, refugees, wounded soldiers and poor rural workers, feature strongly in preliminary sketches, they seldom survive into the finished works - as William Packer observed in The Times, the figures had gone "leaving a space or structure in which a figure indeed might be, but as an implicit presence". These, typically, are painted in oil on gessoed panels, which are pared down to the minimum, every square inch minutely considered.[3]

Selected exhibitions[edit]

The Redfern Gallery, London staged a retrospective of Morris’s work in May/June, 2008 and a further one-man show, focussing on his drawings, was held at the gallery in June/July, 2010. His work was included in several group shows at the Redfern, including Aspects of Landscape in 2014.[4]

In the following years his work was rediscovered and championed by younger generations of artists. New Foundations, a one-man show of paintings was held at 42 Carlton Place, Glasgow in September/October 2015.[5] A two-person show, with Carol Rhodes, was mounted in Balfron Tower, London in May, 2016.[6] A solo show was held at 3236RLS Le Bourgeois, London in November/ December 2018.[7]

In March/April 2019 a major solo exhibition of Morris was held in Galerie Neu, Berlin and his work was included in their Art Basel presentation of that year.[8]

In March 2020 a solo exhibition of Morris’s work opened at Essex Street gallery in New York. The exhibition was closed due to the Covid19 pandemic and reopened in July for a final week.[9]

Website[edit]

The Estate of Adrian Morris created the website adrianmorris.info in July 2020.

Critical reception[edit]

  • "Morris's work speaks directly of the anxieties and hopes we now harbour about our planet's state in the 21st century. There is an impressive level of consistency and rigour running through his mature output. It amounts to a formidable corpus of work. The paintings' austere, hard-won and, above all precient eloquence deserves to be recognised today".[10]
  • "The images are tense and still, the paint rubbed into the gesso, layer on layer until it seems to become the material it depicts, metal and sand, amplifying the disquiet...Morris's imagery leads us to infer a somehow sacrosanct 'humanist' or 'existential' content.[11]
  • "Adrian Morris was one who understood that interesting painting must be at once concrete and mimetic, a matter of both surface and survey. His signature device of a visual aperture or hatch opening onto flat planes (plains) asserts that painting—pace formalist dogma—is always a window onto a world of illusions. Yet it also reiterates artifice, the presence of the painted panel itself. A compacted, burnished impasto fuses the frame with what is within and beyond. The terrain depicted is synonymous with the painting “ground.” [12]
  • "The paintings in their emptiness emanate light. They are pared back, unpopulated by people, with a stillness that seems to express a deep sense of geological time. They are concerned with viewing – how we view – the frailty of the earth and the vulnerability of the planet.” [13]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Buckman, David (17 December 2004). "Adrian Morris: Painstaking painter who exhibited rarely". The Independent. Archived from the original on 4 October 2009.
  2. ^ Kent, Sarah (1978). Hayward Annual '78 Catalogue. London: Hayward Gallery. pp. 18–19.
  3. ^ Packer, William (4 January 2005). "Adrian Morris: Obituary". The Times.
  4. ^ "Exhibitions: Past". The Redfern Gallery. Archived from the original on 1 May 2019. Retrieved 10 March 2021.
  5. ^ "Adrian Morris: New Foundations, 42 Carlton Place, September-October 2015".
  6. ^ "Adrian Morris and Carol Rhodes, London Gallery, May 2016".
  7. ^ "Adrian Morris, 3236RLS Le Bourgeois, November - December 2018".
  8. ^ "Adrian Morris at Galerie Neu".
  9. ^ "Essex Street gallery".
  10. ^ Cork, Richard (2008). Exhibition catalogue.
  11. ^ Searle, Adrian (1978). "Hayward Review". Artscribe.
  12. ^ "Space Explorations: Adrian Morris •". Mousse Magazine. 7 May 2019. Retrieved 31 January 2020.
  13. ^ Sturgis, Daniel. "Burlington Contemporary - Reviews - Adrian Morris". contemporary.burlington.org.uk. Retrieved 31 January 2020.