Glyn Philpot’s sensitive portraits of Black models bring renewed interest in the artist who fell out of fashion

An exhibition at Pallant House Gallery explores the artist’s life and the change of style that contributed to him being out of favour

 

Glyn Philpot’s Profile of a Man with Hibiscus Flower (Félix) from 1932 is one of several portraits of Black people, including one of the actor Paul Robeson Photo © Piano Nobile

Glyn Philpot’s Profile of a Man with Hibiscus Flower (Félix) from 1932 is one of several portraits of Black people, including one of the actor Paul Robeson Photo © Piano Nobile

 

You could say that the seed for the exhibition Glyn Philpot: Flesh and Spirit at Pallant House Gallery was planted 20 years ago. Simon Martin, the director of the Chichester museum, was studying at the Courtauld Institute and doing work experience at Sotheby’s auction house when he first came across the artist’s sensitive portrait of a Black model called Félix from the 1930s. He went on to write his master’s thesis on Philpot (1884-1937), and since then, he says, he has been waiting for the “right moment” to put on an exhibition.

“Although we’re dealing with an artist’s work from 1900 to 1937, the themes that emerge are increasingly relevant today,” Martin says. The exhibition—the first on Philpot’s work since his centenary show at the National Portrait Gallery in 1984—brings together several paintings, drawings and sculptures that have not been shown in public for decades, and focuses on his radical development from old-masterly portraits to a sparse Modernist style. “Based on reading his letters, I think he felt that he was no longer reflecting the world he was in and wanted to make the break,” Martin says. “He felt that he had become a kind of traditionalist.”

 

Philpot's Entrance to the Tagada (1931) Photo © The Fine Art Society, Bridgeman Images

Philpot’s Entrance to the Tagada (1931)
Photo © The Fine Art Society, Bridgeman Images

 

 

SOURCE: https://www.theartnewspaper.com/