Aubrey Williams: Realm of the Sun

October Gallery, 24 Old Gloucester Street, London
Aubrey Williams: Realm of the Sun image
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Event has ended
This event ended on Saturday 21st of November 2015
Admission
Free
Location

October Gallery, 24 Old Gloucester Street, London

Nearest Tube/Rail Stations
Russell Square 0.20 miles

October Gallery, London, will present an exhibition by Aubrey Williams, introducing works previously unseen.

Aubrey Williams' distinctive contribution to 20th century British art as a master of painterly abstraction is increasingly recognized; a contemporary of Alan Davie and Peter Lanyon, Williams’ work invites productive comparison but has yet to receive comparable attention.

Born in Georgetown, Guyana, in 1926, Williams’ early training as an agronomist took him to the north-west rainforest where he lived for two years among the indigenous Warrau people. This proved to be a formative period of his life in which he, as he later said, 'started to understand what art really is.'

Arriving in London in 1952, ostensibly for further studies in agriculture, Williams soon enrolled at St. Martin’s School of Art. Meanwhile he travelled widely in Europe so as to examine the core works of Western modernist painting. . From the early 1960s, Williams exhibited widely, winning awards and garnering high acclaim from a London art circuit impressed by what Guy Brett has called 'the heady interface between artistic innovation and trans-nationalism'.

Williams was an integral part of the explosion of creativity and optimism amongst Caribbean writers, artists and intellectuals in London at the time. This cultural ferment was exemplified in the Caribbean Artists Movement (CAM), established in 1966. Williams was a founder member of CAM and participated fully in its activities.

In the 25 years since Aubrey Williams’ death (1990), his work has been exhibited in a wide range of contexts and institutions, in addition to important solo exhibitions. The Whitechapel Art Gallery’s major retrospective, in 1998, was followed by a room display and accompanying Study Day at Tate Britain in 2007 and then more significant exhibitions in Liverpool and London in 2010. Further acquisitions of paintings by Tate, and material for its Archive, have enabled ever-growing recognition of Williams’ unique place in British art history. In April 2014, a symposium on his work was held at Cambridge University. This reaffirmed Williams’ position as an exceptional visionary whose work foreshadowed ecological fears which become ever more urgent.

Tags: Art

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