SOLD
Study for Clematis, circa 1960
Framed (ref: 3653)
Chalk on tracing paper, 10 7/8 x 8 1/2 in. (27.5 x 21.5 cm.)
Tags: Sir Thomas Monnington chalk
Chalk on tracing paper, 10 7/8 x 8 1/2 in. (27.5 x 21.5 cm.)
Tags: Sir Thomas Monnington chalk
Provenance: Lady Monnington; John Monnington
Literature: Paul Liss, Thomas Monnington, The Fine Art Society 1997, p. 57
This work was inspired by a Clematis Montana growing at Leyswood. My interest in abstract is in trying to do something more than imitate, Monnington explained in an interview for the Church Times, (30 December 1966): I think it is possible that, through a more abstract approach, one can get nearer to the underlying nature of reality. A
still life entitled Clematis - exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1959
(34) - was possibly the point of departure for this more abstract
interpretation.
This work is closely related to the ceiling of the Mary Harris Memorial
Chapel in its colour and construction. Bristol and Exeter were
undoubtedly instrumental in Monningtons pursuit of ‘Geometric’
paintings (a term he preferred to Abstracts). When the Tate purchased
Monnington’s Square Design (1967) he spoke of his abstract paintings as
“direct
descendants from my ceiling painting in the Council House, Bristol,
which was my first departure from purely representational painting.
Since them I have been increasingly interested in the subdivisions of
surface areas contained in equilateral rectangels (squares) and
rectangles derived from square roots. These two-dimensional
mathematical relationships suggest to me dimensions in depth, and
provide a discipline which at the present time I find as necessary and
interesting as that imposed previously in representational painting...
You can cut out the blurb if you wish, but I was trying for my own
edification to put into words what I think I have been trying to do in
the last ten years”, (letter of 12th June 1968)