Lowry and the
Painting of Modern Life
Tate Britain (26th June 2013 - 20th October 2013)
We know Lowry. The small people, busy on the canvas. The
factories and tall funnel-chimneys filling the air with smoke on the white sky
surrounds the ant-like people. The industrial age is his primary inspiration,
but only in this recent exhibition at the Tate Britain, do we see the true
starting point and witness how he progressed – in a manner that never truly
deviated from his original working-class depictions from the 1920’s through to
the 1960’s.
Set within six rooms, Lowry and the Painting of Modern Life begins as we see who
influenced his fascination with the working-class. Taught at the Manchester School
of Art, TJ Clarke and Anne M Wagner curate the exhibition by connecting him to
the Impressionists and the ‘modern life’ paintings of Manet. Seeing the initial
images with Impressionist thoughts floating in your mind you realise that, akin
to the busy brush strokes of Monet and van Gogh, Lowry doesn’t use busy brush
strokes unless depicting a busy group of people. His brush strokes, in many
instances, are the people themselves, busying the canvas. Expressive and catching
the movement of the factory entrance or football stadium, the movement
Impressionists sought to portray is caught by Lowry in the people who move;
something often missed when it is contrasted with the firm, static buildings
dominating the majority of the image. Unlike the Impressionists, Lowry shows
this contrast rather than turn the entire image into a wash of vivid colours
and marks.
That’s not to say the influence is any less clear in the
remaining rooms of the exhibition. The second room arranges French realist
images – including a van Gogh – alongside Lowry’s to show the comparative use
of colour and composition.
The remaining rooms are arranged chronologically, noting his
particular connection to destroyed landscapes. Landscapes destroyed by war or
industrialism and the communities they left behind. We see The Cripples and The Removal (a
title that should be ‘The Eviction’) highlighting the working-class communities
themselves and the issues that remained following World War II. Many
social-issues were improving – the National Health Service was introduced – but
Lowry remains fixated on working-class poverty. The Fever Van that collects children – with parents well-aware that
once child step inside, it is most likely they will not return.
The final room displays Industrial landscapes that Lowry adapted
as he painted. “Lowry understood that British Industry was grinding to halt” writes
Clarke and Wagner, remaining “sceptical about the ‘end of the old working class’”.
Owen Jones, in Chavs: The Demonization of
the Working Class, repeats the New Labour idea that “we’re all middle-class
now” – and how the working class have been destroyed following Thatcher’s dismantling
of the unions and closure of the mines. Jones refers to ideals and political
attitudes at the end of the millennium and into the 2000’s – Lowry paints these
final images in the 1960’s. Maybe the era is different; maybe rickets and TB is
long-gone – but poverty still exists in the UK – considerably more in the Northern
communities Lowry painted. Hauntingly poignant, Lowry’s paintings become
ghost-like images of a time that is no more – one can only imagine what a
modern-day Lowry would paint – call centres? Westfield? Even the High Street is
no more.
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