Stephen Pollock 2023, 'A light touch', Fremantle Herald, Saturday 14 October 2023: 17.
HAVING painted for more than 60 years, you could forgive Spearwood artist George Haynes for packing away the brushes altogether, but the 85-year-old "master of light" still has a twinkle in his eye and paints everyday.
In fact he's busy preparing for his latest exhibition In Search of Painting, a sort of career retrospective featuring old and new works.
Pilbara Light (from the Herald article)
Known as a 'master of light', Haynes imbues his paintings of WA landscapes and everyday life with beautiful swathes of colour and delicate shadows.
His work is reminiscent of the vibrant colours employed by David Hockney in the 1960s, but with a more dreamy, soft-focus touch.
Born in Kenya, the son of a doctor, as a kid Haynes would sketch to pass the time in remote regions of Africa, before going on to study at Chelsea School of Art and then moving to WA in 1962.
"On arriving in WA, one was so struck by the light that you had to do something about it," he says "Having been painting in London - grey old London - yeah, it was a blast."
Over the years, Haynes has drawn on the old masters like Caravaggio and Georges de la Tour, who popularised the use of chiaroscuro (light and shade) in their paintings.
Cue (from the Herald article)
"Very powerful lighting, you know, and the same with la Tour," Haynes says. "It makes for nice things in the shadows and so on. But, you know, another great favourite of mine is the Dutch painter, Gerard Ter Borch, and he has a thing about material and it's just fantastic. You know, I rate him very highly in the Dutch school."Us at Ooloo (from the Herald article)
Over the years, Haynes has dabbled in other mediums, but the 'golden ratio' has been a relative constant, popping up in various guises and forms throughout his work.(clockwise) Pilbara dusk, Cue, and Us at Ooloo by George Haynes (above), photo by Rob Frith
"Well, painting from the landscape teaches you a lot because you don't know what you're going to get," he says.
"And the other thing about going out in the landscape is that the day changes. So that you have to pretend those trees that are really quite pale at the moment, are going to be silhouetted because that's finishing up time, four o'clock, three-thirty, something like that.
"And these little disciplines, you know, and if you make it look like the landscape that's a bonus - but it will teach you because it's changing, it's mutating, giving new ideas."
As part of the exhibition. Art Collective WA is producing the first ever monograph about George Haynes with over 150 photographs and essays by art critic John McDonald and curator Sally Quin.
In Search of Painting is at the Art Collective WA in Cathedral Square (565 Hay Street) Perth from October 21-November 18.
Top photo of the artist from the Fremantle Herald by Rob Frith.
Garry Gillard | New: 24 October, 2018 | Now: 14 October, 2023