Henryk Gotlib

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Henryk Gotlib (189030 December 1966), was a Polish-born painter, draughtsman, printmaker, and writer, who settled in England and made a significant contribution to modern British art. He was profoundly influenced by Rembrandt, and the European Expressionist painters.

Eve (1962, London, Private Collection), oil on canvas.Gotlib was over seventy years old when he painted this picture, which epitomises the more brooding quality of his later work.
Eve (1962, London, Private Collection), oil on canvas.
Gotlib was over seventy years old when he painted this picture, which epitomises the more brooding quality of his later work.

“There was never any doubt of Gotlib’s stature in the mainstream of 20th Century European painting” (C. M. Kauffmann, Director, Courtauld Institute of Art).[1]

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[edit] Biography

Gotlib was born into a middle-class family in Krakow, where he gained his earliest artistic training at the Academy of Fine Arts in Krakow from 1908 to 1910. Due to pressure from his parents, he also read law at the university in Krakow during this period, although it was clear from an early age that he had a profound passion for art. His earliest portraits of his mother, in which he experimented with a variety of styles including that of Vuillard and late Cubism, date back to when he was just 16 years old.

He continued his artistic training at the Kunstgewerbeschule in Vienna (1911-13) and later at the Munich Academy of Fine Art under Angelo Jank (1913-14). It was during this period that he was exposed to European Expressionist masters, falling under the influence of expressionists like Max Beckmann and Egon Schiele.

During his lifetime, Gotlib exhibited extensively throughout Europe with much success. His first one-man show - in Warsaw in 1918 - was organised by the Society of Polish Artists whom he joined at the end of World War I. The following year, Gotlib returned to Krakow and became a leading member of the Polish avant-garde ‘Formist’ movement, exhibiting in Berlin, Amsterdam and Paris. In 1922, the Van Gogh Gallery in Amsterdam held a one-man exhibition of his work.

He lived in France, mainly in Paris, during the years 1923 through 1929, when he participated in exhibitions at the Salon d'Automne and the Salon des Indépendants. In 1930 he joined the Group of Ten after returning to Poland, where he remained until 1933. He went travelling once more from 1933, spending long periods in Italy, Greece and Spain, and met his wife in 1938 during a visit to London. With the outbreak of World War II shortly after this, Gotlib settled in England, where he remained until his death. During his first year in England, Gotlib was invited to join the London Group, which had no foreign members at that time. This was a great honour, indeed an indication of his prolific talent as a painter.

Gotlib was also a talented writer. During his years in Paris he was art correspondent to the Warsaw Times, and his book Polish Painting was published in 1942. It tells us of his contemporary Polish artists and Polish artists through the ages. Polish Painting also provides some information of the ‘Formist’ movement, and includes a detail of his painting Warsaw, September 1959 that he was moved to paint after the German army attacked Warsaw. In the same year that this book was published, Gotlib participated in several important exhibitions in Britain, including ‘Exhibition of Works of Polish and Czechoslovak Artists', at Oxford’s Ashmolean Museum. He exhibited extensively in Britain from 1940 onwards and examples of his work can be found in many public collections (see heading 'public collections' below).

[edit] Formism

Gotlib was a leading member of the Formist movement; an avant-garde art movement in Poland which originated around 1917-18 and lasted until around 1923-24. The movement was started by a group of energetic young artists, writers and poets who essentially pursued a passion for anti-naturalism. According to Gotlib, Formism "proclaimed an absolute break with the past and the rebirth of art [in Poland]."[2] Polish art at the time was traditionally concerned with history painting and anecdote, emphasising the importance of narrative in art. With the deformation of nature, subordination of forms, abolishment of a single viewpoint and crude colouring, "the formist storm"[3] attacked academicism and established a front against naturalism and the imitation of nature.

[edit] Later years

As a figurative artist, he was largely neglected after the rise in popularity of abstract expressionism in the 1950s, and his final years were shadowed by depression, which is reflected in the sombre canvases from this period:

"Typically one thinks of oil paintings of nudes, dark in tone, grainy, with impasto, in texture, broad and bold in treatment…in the tradition of German expressionism”.[4]

In 1964, he was included in the exhibition 'Fifty years of British Art' at the Tate Gallery. Indeed, his contribution to British art is well-known. In The Burlington Magazine in 1942, Tancred Borenius wrote: “A highly personal sense of colour in a lovely, luminous totality gives the keynote to his art”; Michel Strauss commented on the “strength and sensitivity” of his work in the same Journal in 1961.

Gotlib died in Godstone, Surrey, England, at the age of 76. After his death he was acknowledged with an important Arts Council Retrospective Exhibition at the Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art in 1970, organised by Douglas Hall. Another major retrospective of his work took place in 1980 at the National Museum, Warsaw, in Poland.

[edit] Public collections

  • His “powerful”[5] painting Rembrandt in Heaven is owned by the Tate Gallery, London. “Altogether I do not learn more from anybody, except Rembrandt”,[6] wrote Gotlib to John Nowell in January 1964.
  • A painted plaster self-portrait entitled Henryk Gotlib (see picture) is in the collection of the National Portrait Gallery, London.
  • Also in the collection of the National Portrait Gallery are 64 pencil drawings of international writers, scientists, diplomats and politicians, sketched by the artist at the international conference of scientists held in 1941 by the British Association.
  • Standing Nude is in the collection of the National Museum of Wales, Cardiff
  • The Samuel Courtauld Trust owns a small collection of Gotlib paintings.

[edit] References

  1. ^ C. M. Kauffmann, Director of the Courtauld Institute of Art, in Henryk Gotlib 1890-1966: A European Master (London: Boundary Gallery, 1988), p.3.
  2. ^ Henryk Gotlib, Polish Painting (London: Minerva, 1942), p.60.
  3. ^ Gotlib, Polish Painting, p.64.
  4. ^ Kauffmann, p.3.
  5. ^ Monica Bohm-Duchen in Henryk Gotlib 1890-1966: A European Master (London: Boundary Gallery, 1988), p.49.
  6. ^ Henryk Gotlib, quoted in Henryk Gotlib 1890-1966: A European Master (London: Boundary Gallery, 1988).

[edit] Writings by Gotlib

  • Polish Painting, London: Minerva, 1942.
  • Travels of a Painter, commissioned by a Warsaw publisher but interrupted by the outbreak of World War II. Written in 1938/39.

[edit] Bibliography

  • Gotlib, Henryk, Polish Painting, London: Minerva, 1942.
  • Holzer, Lolek, 'Henryk Gotlib' in The Grove Dictionary of Art, ed. by Jane Turner. New York: Grove, 1996.
  • Henryk Gotlib: Paintings and Drawings, exh. cat. Edinburgh: National Gallery of Modern Art; Cardiff: National Museum Cardiff; 1970.
  • Henryk Gotlib (1890-1966), exh. cat. Warsaw: National Museum, 1980.
  • British Landscape Painting, 1850-1950, exh. cat. London: Hayward Gallery, 1983.
  • Henryk Gotlib 1890-1966: A European Master, exh. cat., foreword by C. M. Kauffmann, essays by J. Russell Taylor and M. Bohm-Duchen. London: Boundary Gallery, 1988.

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