|
Five Paintings by Frances Hodgkins E.A. SHEPPARD In this essay I discuss five works of Frances Hodgkins, chosen from the increasing number of her pictures accessible to viewers in the public art galleries of New Zealand, which illustrate various stages in her artistic development. The first, Mr and Mrs Moffat Lindner and Hope comes from near the end of her Impressionist period; Lancashire Family shows her cautiously experimenting with Cubism; Ruins tends towards abstraction and has Surrealist overtones; Root Crop and Purbeck Courtyard, Afternoon belong to the latter end of her career, when she had developed her own distinctive Expressionist idiom. The following notes link these pictures with the letters Frances Hodgkins wrote, over more than fifty years, to relatives, friends and professional associates. Her letters are essential biographical material, and an edition, sponsored by the Alexander Turnbull Library and authorized by the Field-Hodgkins family, holders of the copyright, is in course of preparation. Sometimes, however, the letters have a more direct bearing on the actual work of the artist, which they help to place in context. It is this context of creativity which is discussed in the following pages. Quotations present the spelling and punctuation of the letters without change.
Mr and Mrs Moffat Lindner and Hope When Hodgkins and Lindner first met, at
Caudebec in 1901, he was forty-nine and she thirty-two. The friendship then
begun, and renewed in 1907 during her year of work at Dordrecht, reminds one not
a little of the comradely relationship enjoyed by the youthful Isabel Hodgkins
with her father and Dr Scott. There is the same respect for experience and
skill, tempered by the same irreverent enjoyment of personal foibles. 'That kind
dry old stick Moffat', Frances wrote in July 1908, 'has been a real trump to me
& is going to introduce me to some of the right sort when I go to town. . .
. '1 And again, three months later, as a guest
in the Lindner home: Encouragement, patronage and hospitality continued over the years: the Lindners 'are very good friends of mine,' she wrote in 1926. It was only to be expected, therefore, that when in 1914 the outbreak of war confined her to England, she should settle in St Ives to be near them. And at St Ives she remained, with few interruptions beyond the summer interludes for sketching classes, until the end of 1918. On 10 January 1916 she wrote to her mother: But the double portrait in oil seems to have been abandoned, for what we have is a three figure conversation piece in tempera. Only a few details of the original design are retained. Mr Lindner still wears his colourful clothes, but Hope has lost her blue tam o'shanter and the berry-red buttons from her grey tweed coat; and her stockings, in necessary contrast to the green and white couch she sits on, are black. The altered setting is hard to interpret. Father and child are posed against the outside of a closed and curtained window. The newly introduced figure of the mother stands, half facing them, outlined against a cloudy sky (the sea is nowhere in evidence). She wears her hat, and has let her coat, or cloak, slip back in trailing folds supported only by her forearms. Is some expedition in prospect, or just concluded? The date of the picture is less difficult to determine. It must be later than the letter of 10 January 1916, but not by very much. The Lindners' 'new baby' of 1907, 'all curls & dimples & roses & as spoilt as any princess & far more imperious' in October 1908, would have been about ten years old in 1916; and this is the apparent age of Hope Lindner as Frances Hodgkins has portrayed her. She is possibly a little younger, but, one would say, pretty certainly no older than ten. The artist's signature 'F Hodgkins' would also support a date as early as is consistent with the biographical evidence: during the war years she gave up using this form in favour of 'Frances Hodgkins', which remained her regular signature till the end of her career.
Lancashire Family It was painted, most probably, in the early
months of 1927 - a picture so esteemed would not have been excluded, had it been
available, from her Manchester show of November 1926; and was exhibited at the
Claridge Gallery, London, in April 1928, a show which drew high critical praise.
Some time thereafter it disappeared, with a borrower who failed to return it,
and was not recovered until 1944, by which time the artist retained only a vague
memory of its details. 'If any good' she wrote, 'it ought to have a' career in
the Galleries. .. , 1928 is about the date I fancy - I can't recall it - more
than it being rather architectural in design - title 'Lancashire Family'; '5
and again:
Ruins From December 1934 Frances Hodgkins made a
series of brief stays at Corfe Castle, and from 21 May 1937 to the spring of
1939 her headquarters were at Worth Matravers, a 'little lost village on the
coast near Swan age opp: the Isle of Wight'7 -
'this bit of coast line in Dorset the loveliest in the world,'8
she thought. The farmhouse 'Seaview' where she lodged and worked was: It is the summer morning, eastward view she has commemorated in Ruins, shown among her 'new paintings and watercolours' at the Lefevre Gallery October-November 1937. But there is a nightmare touch in this stridently blue morning scene, where, in Surrealist fashion, natural features are arbitrarily enlarged and displaced. Across the background, the Needles rise up as if only a narrow strait separated them from the Dorset shore. The foreground is dominated by the ruins marking an abandoned quarry - just such ruins as the 'Old Quarry Hut, Swan age' which Paul Nash had photographed for his Guide.
Root Crop Here, for nearly two months, 'while the
weather was good,' she 'painted like mad' in preparation for a spring show. By
the end of October she could report: She had also painted indoors - 'seriously made pictures of the funny chimney ornaments, which do so lend themselves to decoration12 - so that her 'new series of Gouaches painted during 1942-3', shown at the Lefevre Gallery March-April 1943, was, within its local range, remarkably diversified in subject. Back in Corfe, she had worked under difficulties, and only fifteen of the twenty gouaches she had hoped to complete were exhibited. But even in a combined show, facing the challenge of Picasso and his Contemporaries, all fifteen (including Root Crop) were sold, to wide acclaim from the critics. The 'suave and unified' handling which one of them praised is well exemplified in Root Crop - a twilight fantasy created about a prosaic subject - and the group as a whole, no doubt, like individual examples from it, reflects the artist's mood. Frances Hodgkins always felt she painted best when she was happy, and she had been happy at Dolaucothy. Root Crop is clearly dated 1943, but in the 1943 Lefevre catalogue it is listed as Root Crop 1942, as if the date formed part of the title. Whatever the intention, the discrepancy has meant that in later catalogues the picture is assigned sometimes to 1942, sometimes to 1943. Even if finished in 1943, however, it is clearly a 'Dolaucothy' production.
Purbeck Courtyard, Afternoon There are only two references in the letters
which seem to apply directly to these pictures, and they are not very
informative. On 20 October 1944, Frances Hodgkins wrote to Eardley Knollys, , .
. . I have 2-3 high powered gouaches - also ditto oils. The weather, no rain for
once, very mixed & difficult for working any distance from my doorstep - but
doors wide open & today sea breezes by your order magically exhilarating. .
. '; and nearly three months later, characteristically misdating her letter 16
January 1944, she informed the insistent Macdonald at the Lefevre Gallery: The halcyon interval she mentions to Knollys may account for the serenity of Purbeck Courtyard in both its aspects. And there is no reason to dispute her dating: even if the oils were not sent to Lefevre's as soon as she promised, they were completed when she wrote in January. But there is a passage, referring indubitably to works she was engaged on in May 1945, which one would like to apply to these two pictures. In the spring of 1945 she tried to repeat the success of 1942 at Llangurig, in Montgomery, but was disappointed. Back at Corfe, she wrote, 'So, after a fortnight. . . I decided I had had enough of the lovely Wye valley, lovely but not easy to get about in. ... I was dead off painting - '13 And then, just three weeks later, still at Corfe, she wrote, 'My Muse has returned to me - I found her waiting for me on the doorstep faithful wench, which goes to show how futile it is to travel over Mountains in search of material when it lies at your own pavement, for the seeing.' 14 NOTES |