More than surprised, I was actually rather shocked by the venom and silliness of William Feaver’s review in The Spectator (June 25th 2011) of Ian Collins’ new book, a generous and extensive – indeed, the first ever – survey of John Craxton’s work, John Craxton (Lund Humphries; 2011). In fact, his article is less a review than a personal attack on John.
Tate Britain has organised a small exhibition to coincide with the publication of the book. The paintings are few and the show does rather give the impression of having been cobbled together to coincide with the launch of the book.
That said, I do not see how anyone could fail to be struck, for instance, by Pastoral for P.W., its wonderful movement and harmony and the striking colours: a perfectly balanced and dynamic composition. Music, in fact. And John often used to say, “The difference between my approach and Lucian’s (Lucian Freud, the friend of his youth) is that Lucian has to have something to copy, whereas I paint from my imagination. For me painting is like composing…”
Or the big land- and seascape, based on the island of Hydra: an abstracted, schematic representation of the bare elements of the island – rock, angularity, spikiness – set in a tessellated sea, a mosaic of dashes of brilliant, audacious colour against the distant mountain coastline of the Peloponnese.
Or the Cretan gorge, one of many that he painted, its architecture articulated and emphasised by the double and triple bright-coloured lines that are such a distinctive feature of John’s painting, the depth of the gorge pierced by a single broken line representing the penetration of the sunlight.
Feaver dismisses such paintings as “slotted together on Graeco-Byzantine lines”!
John was interested in the flat planes and schematic representation of Byzantine icon-painting. He said that going to Greece enabled him to get back behind the Renaissance and its influences.
“Not yet twenty and already well-versed in overgrown styling and poetic self-pity” – this is Feaver on John’s early work. Well, first, you might have thought, a young man of that age – a teenager, after all – might be forgiven a rather mannered introspection. But, included in the Tate show, are some wonderfully playful and entertaining letters that John wrote to EQ Nicholson, who was a kind of surrogate mother to him at this age. A read of them should have shown Feaver that self-pity was not something John indulged in and I never saw a hint of it in the fifty years I knew him.
There is something oddly personal in Feaver’s dismissiveness. John did not live an idyll, underlain by “scratchiness”; he lived a life like anyone else, painting, finding his way, and, yes, like most people who spend their lives painting or writing, he was often short of funds.
The “emblems,” as Feaver calls them, that recur in John’s painting were not a “hedonic mosaic of favourite things with which to fill pictures.” They were not “taverna enticements”; they were the elements of life in the poor, sun-baked, traditional rural society that Greece was in those days. Men lived out on the mountain with their sheep and goats, shearing and milking by hand, sleeping on the ground, accompanying their animals at all times, as they still do. They fished, living on their small wooden boats, eating little, sleeping on the deck. They did their military service, the only time many of them ever went away from home. Their pay was not enough to keep them in cigarettes for a month. Their entertainment was comradeship and dancing: it was their means of self-expression – they did not read books; there was not any television. There was a NATO naval base at Souda, close to where John lived, whence the dancing sailors in his painting. “Tintin graphics,” indeed!
Life was poor, harsh, formal and ritualised. John’s painting reflects this. I can only think it is too great a leap of imagination for Feaver to understand how very different from sludge-coloured, blurry England the world that John had entered was.
He quotes some youthful, not very illuminating bit of philosophising about life that John had indulged in as a youngster and accuses him of “burbling away.” In fact, he goes out of his way to make this unusually articulate man, whose conversation was always full of wit and originality and startling insights, seem inane, while, elsewhere, allowing Lucian Freud to utter such profundities as, “The world is rather floorboardish,” without comment!
Perhaps it is just that Feaver is a fully paid up member of the Freud claque, as Brian Sewell calls it. For John and Lucian did fall out, and badly. And I don’t suppose Brian Sewell’s repeated suggestions that John Craxton was the more accomplished artist and had taught Freud a thing or two have gone down particularly well with the claque.
Here is my little contribution to the Craxton/Freud feud. I was having lunch with John one Sunday not long before he died, when an old friend from the art world phoned to say that he had just lunched with Freud and had mentioned John’s name to him. “Oh, is he still alive?” Freud had replied, with exaggerated indifference. John’s reply – I could of course only hear his end of the conversation: “Next time, tell him I haven’t yet died of ‘art failure!”
*****
I loved this piece and cannot see why you are upset by it – it comes straight from your heart and to H*** with Feaver who is a nasty minded bitter old man lacking in taste and blinded by his membership of the Lucien claque – I would rather have John any day – and I do agree with Hilary about the twang and ping. I have not got over Sewell saying in his Standard obit. how there would hardly be anyine at John’s memorial service because he was forgotten and look how wrong he was.
H
I couldn’t agree more. This is a lovely book, and I wrote to the author after reading it to tell him so. The Feaver review was breathtaking in its smug nastiness and triviality.
I’ve liked Freud’s work for years now. A lot of great art has been made from what was in front of the artist at the time.
The other day I had the pleasant surprise of walking into the John Craxton room at the Tate Britain. I had never heard of him. I spent some delightful happy instructive time there, (despite having already seen the Vorticist exhibition and one other exhibit and hence possible mental overload!)
Feuds feuds! The world is full of them and the Art world is no exception!
Loved the “art failure comment though!
Similarly I had never heard of Craxton until I walked into the John Craxton room at the Tate. I was bowled over: I left the Tate with a huge smile on my face, and feeling very excited , so much so that I urged all my art loving friends to rush to the Tate to see these joyful, exciting paintings. Unfortunately the exhibition was on for such a short time, that many people did not get a chance to see it. I have since bought the Ian Collins book, and Craxton is coming alive. I love all his jokes and puns. I have not read Willaim Feaver. Freud is such a different kettle of fish that perhaps comparisons as the old saying goes are odious. Enough.
It interesting to hear that John Craxton’s work made you smile, how many of Freud’s pictures could you say the same thing about? Just the colours brighten your day and Hilary Spurling in her very thoughtful talk with David Attenborough mentioned the ‘ping’ and ‘twang’ of colour and I thought that this perfectly described how I felt about John.
John Craxton to me is the very epitome of the ARTIST, he lived, he painted, glorious sun-filled work vibrating with life and music. He was kind and engaging, welcoming he those who walked into his life, John added a whole new dimension to mine, i love Ian Collins book, i miss John and seem to love his work more with each passing day. his house in chania, in London, his wit, and enthusiasm for life, his friends and his art; God bless him and all who seek to understand his life and art. colin mantripp wood carver
Interesting . thank you.