Mr Smith and the reviewer, Peter B Lloyd, looking at Hyde Park 3, at the Preview of Refuge at The Brick Lane Gallery, 20th
November 2013. [Photo: Reka
Komoli]
|
Nature loves
ordered chaos. But the human intellect craves cognitive compactness: small,
tidy concepts that can be controlled, and put to work in the name of art. What
if an artist's subject is not conceptual but is the untrammelled forest of
nature's living organisms and their traces. What about art that eschews the
lexicon of anthropocentric simplifications? And seeks to engage with nature on
its terms? The apparatus of conceptual art slides like a sealing veil over
nature's intricate textures, and a quite different approach is called for by a
natural subject even so humble as a square foot of ground in Hyde
Park.
Mr Smith's
self-effacing artist's name reflects the graphical stance with which he engages
with nature's manifold of plant debris. He hides himself. Bearing the archetypally
ubiquitous British surname of "Smith", with no forename, he allows
his micro-pen to map out the limitless detail of the leaves, twigs, seed pods,
calyxes, and the passing Durex wrapper. With no visual composition, no
narrative, no dramatic tension, no aesthetic editing, Mr Smith depicts a found
scene. What we see in his drawings are
little corners of nature, raw and unedited.
Except, of course, that the drawings are not quite as pure and
unfiltered as they seem to be telling us. To begin with, Mr Smith has
consciously chosen these particular square patches of ground rather than any
others. And, as Mr Smith told me at the preview of his exhibition at the Brick Lane
Gallery, he removed some
larger, distracting items from the scenes depicted in his drawings. For
example, in one scene, a block of wood that was just outside the frame of the
picture cast a shadow across the picture, which he feared would distract the
viewer's attention and leave people wondering, "What's that?" - which
might have been a more conceptual artist’s deliberate intention, but would
interfere with Mr Smith's aim to show a naïve view of nature. Second, and quite
obviously, the original scene would be filled out with a subtly woven tapestry
of colours and hues whereas Mr Smith has drawn a black-and-white delineation of
form, a graphical maze of edges, contours, and lines of texture—which omits the
spectrum of colours.
Hyde Park 1 |
So, the
drawing is not so much a representation of every detail, but rather a gesture
of capturing the structure of every form. One result of Mr Smith's
painstakingly picking out the boundaries of each object is to emphasise that
every fragment has its own separate identity, its own origin and mode of decay—the
leaves that shrivel and crack into dust, the branches that are eroded by
woodlice and insects, condom wrappers that will last for millennia. Each has
its separate visible form and role to play in the life of the park. Mr Smith honours each scrap of leaf or wood
with patience, attention, and reverence. He mentioned to me that he had
recently been studying eastern philosophy, and certainly his drawings are
suggestive of the notion found in the Upanishads of all life-forms as different
faces, or instantiations, of the universal consciousness of Brahman. Indeed all
objects, both animate and inanimate, inherit that divinity. It is that notion
of the ubiquitous and plenipotentiary presence of spirit in every creeping
thing, every twig and shrivelled leaf, that informs Mr Smith's uniformly
dignified drawing of each distinct scrap of plant debris on the mud of Hyde Park. He told me that his long and patient rendering
of these tableaux of natural disintegration induces in him a sense of
reverence. This is fitting for an art-form that observes even the smallest fragment
of life with full attention.
Mr Smith
stays unprecious about the naturalness of what he is drawing. If fag ends and
condom wrappers end up in the leaves then, well, he draws them too. He told me
that the piles of bits and pieces the he draws had, in part, been swept off the
footpath by park-keepers. Humans are as much part of the natural world as
magpies and hedgehogs, according to Mr Smith.
While his
drawings create a space into which the numinous aspect of nature can flow, Mr
Smith's intentions are more prosaic and, like his artist's name, self-effacing.
His series of drawings have some of their roots in doodles, and draw into
themselves remembered imagery of vegetation, growing into a project of photographing
selected squares of ground and, in the studio, drawing what was captured in the
stills. It is this unpretentious surrender to the humble subject-matter that
enables Mr Smith to pull in, through tendrils of ink, the spirit of the
undergrowth. To paraphrase what Robert Pirsig wrote in his classic book Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance,
Mr Smith shows that “the Buddha, the Godhead, resides quite as comfortably in
the crushed twigs and fag ends of Hyde Park as
he does at the top of the mountain, or in the petals of a flower. To think otherwise
is to demean the Buddha - which is to demean oneself.”
Mr Smith is
not trying to make an artistic statement but, by letting his pen execute the
lines that it wants, he is, in a Zen paradox, making a statement of art.
A second series of drawings
hung in the Brick
Lane Gallery
are the surreal spheres of undergrowth and fragments of wooden material (Transition and Refuge). These ‘plant planets’ are more artistically stated, as
they depict imaginary worlds rather than the prosaic world of Hyde
Park (although they still have their tap roots in unselfconscious
doodles.). They remind me of the floating islands of the film Avatar, which in turn hark back to the
watercolour aerial islands that adorned Roger Dean's album covers for the 1970s
rock group Yes. It was one of these
drawings (Refuge) that The Brick Lane
Gallery used as the front image for its publicity for this exhibition.
A final
series is represented by a single, and singular, drawing of an eye, whose pupil
is the eclipsed sun, and the iris a lattice strung with flowering plants,
surrounded by dry and disintegrating fragments. Eyes Closed offers enigma in contrast to the naivete of the Hyde Park series. Although the complete picture looks
like an eye, the title (“eyes” in the plural) points to a less direct
interpretation: as the sun is eclipsed, the eyes of the living world are
closed; and if the eclipse were permanent, the living world would crumble away.
It is a visual hymn to the sun, upon which all life depends.
Black ink on
fine grain, heavy, acid-free paper, sizes: A2 (Hyde Park 1,2, and 3), 42 x 42 cm (Transition),
30 x 30 cm (Refuge, Eyes Closed).
Art and Mind is a series of exhibitions
held at the Brick
Lane Gallery
giving exposure to new artists. The current show, Refuge, runs until 1st December. Mr Smith's drawings are exhibited
alongside works by Amanda Holman, Biddy Hodgkinson, Chaowut Cholchalatan,
Carolyn Nelson, DMINC, Jason Dowling, Kayla Richards, and Martyn Jones. Very
reasonably priced prints are for sale at the gallery.
Brick Lane
Gallery, 196 Brick Lane, London
E1 6SA, telephone
0207 729 9721
http://www.thebricklanegallery.com