1. Shehan Karunatilaka’s Chinaman: the Legend of Pradeep Mathew.
2. Other recently purchased cricket books.
3. The Cricket Art (& Poetry) Prize.
I’m going to start at the end and work backwards.
3. The Cricket Art (& Poetry) Prize.
I went to the exhibition opening/award-giving ceremony of the Cricket Art and Poetry Prize on 6 October at the SCG. I always like an opportunity to sneak into the members enclosure after hours.
Sometimes I think it's the sheer amount of breathing space built into cricket that makes it amenable to various forms of artistic contemplation. The big green reflecting-pool of a field, the players scattered like clouds or sheep, the balls punctuating some sort of virtual noosphere where the action is really taking place, the sigh of late afternoon... These are the elements that make up a recognisable cricket aesthetic, a sort of "village green" iconography. There was a great variety of styles in the exhibition, but there was also a distinct group of “genre” pieces in this sense.
This aesthetic is really made up of two or three subgenres:
- Flat-Perspective Naïve
- an emphatic variety of Naïve not connected to perspective that I like to call High Mambo-Drysdale Naïve.
- an emphatic variety of Naïve not connected to perspective that I like to call High Mambo-Drysdale Naïve.
- Deep-Perspective Impressionism
Top to bottom: Lizzy Newcomb: "Tactics", Bryan Bulley: "Dubois from the Cemetery End, gardens #2 Oval, Darwin", Wayne Elliott: "Wheat Town's Cricket Match", John Windus: "Facing Up in the Park".
[Nb. all images (c) the artists, and I have deliberately made these images low-res so as not to be of reproduction quality.]
High Mambo-Drysdale Naïve
Top to bottom: Jan Hynes: "Street Cricket, Late Afternoon, South Townsville", Elisabeth Lawrence: "The Call for Drinks", Bob Marchant: "Caught Out by Bluey Fielding in the Gully"
(Presence of a Dog obviously a key feature of this subgenre.)
[Nb. all images (c) the artists, and I have deliberately made these images low-res so as not to be of reproduction quality.]
High Mambo-Drysdale Naïve
Top to bottom: Jan Hynes: "Street Cricket, Late Afternoon, South Townsville", Elisabeth Lawrence: "The Call for Drinks", Bob Marchant: "Caught Out by Bluey Fielding in the Gully"
(Presence of a Dog obviously a key feature of this subgenre.)
Top to bottom: Paul Collins: "Club Final", Christine Atkins: "Country Cricket", Luke Harvey: "The National Game", David Charlesworth: "The Maiden, Kolkata (Calcutta)".
Hybrids
1. Peter Campbell, Owzat
This one combines the naïve flat perspective with impressionistic brush-style. I like it a lot, those frozen floating poses of the players are like little Giotto angels. Plus when you think about the combination of flat perspective and realism, you realise that this framing and perspective is effectively that of a television screen and that gets big bonus points in my book. The television set is after all the village green for most of us.
This one combines the naïve flat perspective with impressionistic brush-style. I like it a lot, those frozen floating poses of the players are like little Giotto angels. Plus when you think about the combination of flat perspective and realism, you realise that this framing and perspective is effectively that of a television screen and that gets big bonus points in my book. The television set is after all the village green for most of us.
And this one:
2. John Spooner, Last Wicket, Williamstown
This one combines Impressionist and Naïve elements in a way that is really Post-Impressionist: split scene, high colour and bloc colour, and those are some serious Post-Impressionist Trees (cf here and here).
2. John Spooner, Last Wicket, Williamstown
This one combines Impressionist and Naïve elements in a way that is really Post-Impressionist: split scene, high colour and bloc colour, and those are some serious Post-Impressionist Trees (cf here and here).
The winner of the art prize, along with most of the paintings in the exhibition, didn’t belong to one of these genres, and I think it would be extra hard for a member of these genres to win the prize, because of the familiarity of the chord they strike.
My favourites were:
and
Tarli Glover: "Love"
Never thought I'd live long enough to hear of classification called High Mambo-Drysdale Naïve! Brilliant. 'Owzat' looks amazing.
ReplyDeleteThat post is another effortless half-century before lunch, Batsy. Keep em coming!
MW