top of page

Ralph RUMNEY 

1934-2002

 

Untitled1958

 

oil on canvas

69.8 x 39.4 cm

framed: 85 x 54 cm

 

signed and dated 'Rumney 58' (lower centre)

 

PROVENANCE

A gift from the artist to Mr and Mrs Polonio on the occasion of their wedding, and by descent

Please get in touch for price​

Swipe or click on image to view full screen

The son of a vicar, Rumney attended Halifax School of Art until 1952. Between 1952 and 1955 he spent much time living in France and Italy, though he visited London often enough to found Other Voices, a short-lived weekly art magazine. His first one-man show was held in Trieste in 1955, followed a year later by another at the Galleria Apollinaire, Milan. In 1956 the New Vision Centre Gallery, London, a non-commercial gallery committed to international gestural art, gave him his first solo show in Britain. Like many of the artists who showed there in the mid 1950s, Rumney's paintings reflected an interest in the process of mark making rather than the production of a finished work of art. Zen Buddhism and the collective unconscious as theorised by Carl Jung were central to an activity which was claimed to be beyond the ego. In his contribution to the exhibition catalogue Rumney stated, 'An act of creation must be autonomous and independent of the creator…a work of art…must not rely on the personality of its creator for its impact…The artist seeks to eliminate his personality in his work…The power of a work of art rests in its subject. The subject is independent of all formal qualities and becomes a violent and powerful entity in its own right. The artist cannot be objective…We have no intrinsic concern with drawing, colour, matière, surface or finish.' (Quoted in Garlake, p.126.) The 'subject' in this quote is the process of painting as an act of revelation.

Screenshot 2021-11-05 at 10.21.22.png

Ralph Rumney

Although the type of American abstract expressionism displayed at the Modern Art from the United States exhibition, Tate Gallery, 1956 had a profound impact on many British artists, Rumney, who had integrated himself into various sections of the European avant-garde and co-founded the Situationist International in 1957, considered his work to be within a tradition of political dissent rooted in European Surrealism.

 

The Change was first exhibited at Metavisual, Abstract, Tachiste at the Redfern Gallery, London in 1957,where it was displayed alongside abstract works by such artists as Gillian Ayres, Sandra Blow, Robyn Denny, Paul Feiler, Terry Frost, William Gear, Adrian Heath, Patrick Heron, Roger Hilton, Ben Nicholson and Victor Pasmore. According to Rumney, although the picture was painted on the floor of his flat in Neal Street, London, this practice was not a conscious imitation of Jackson Pollock's working methods but rather a pragmatic solution to the very cramped working conditions in his flat. In as much as the painting is the result of numerous dabs or taches of paint applied in an apparently unselfconscious frame of mind, it would appear to be an example of Tachisme. Yet incorporated into the painting is a loose grid of black lines. The grid emerged about midway through the painting process. According to Garlake, 'Rumney claims that he manipulated, rather than submitted to chance, because even with a drip and splatter technique, "You have to know where its going"' (quoted in Garlake, p.125)

bottom of page