We feature each fortnight Nicholas Reid's reviews and comments on new and recent books.
“TONY FOMISON – Life of the Artist” by Mark Forman (Auckland University Press, hardback, $NZ59.99 )
I deliberately begin my review of Mark Forman’s biography of Tony Fomison with a clear judgment. Mark Forman has done an heroic piece of work. He was diligent in chasing down facts about the painter’s life. It’s a matter of no stone being left unturned. He has interviewed as many relevant people as possible – friends or relations of Tony Fomison, painters who did or did not get on with him, critics who wrote about him positively or negatively, odd people who at some time lived with him, women who sometimes looked after him or who got sick of him, people of different ethnicities who got to know him. Mark Forman scoured archives for letters from friends or painters or family members who knew him; or comments about him that had been written by journalists in newspapers about the arts world. In short Forman has been as thorough as humanly possible. This can only be called the definitive life and work of Fomison and it is highly unlikely that any other biographer of Fomison will be able to top it . BUT there is the big problem of overload when we are given too much information. I am reminded of once setting out to read the full version of Boswell’s biography of Johnson and finding it so overloaded that I gave up on it. I did not give up on Tony Fomison – Life of the Artist, but sometimes its precise-ness becomes a bit of a chore to read.
There is one major merit of this biography – when speaking of art and painting, Mark Forman does not talk down to his readership. Too many art critics and art chroniclers use a refined [and largely redundant] recherche vocabulary when interpreting or explaining works of art. I have long believed that [like most post-modernist criticism] the main aim is to show how clever the art critic is and how superior the critic is to us inferior readers. None of that nonsense for Forman. He writes clearly about how art changed in New Zealand in Fomison’s life-time and the different phases of Fomison’s work. When he analyses a painting by Fomison, he says clearly what he believes Fomison was aiming at, he takes us through the techniques Fomison used to create effects in a painting, and what effect the painting had on the general public. BUT one major problem mars this biography. Tony Fomison – Life of the Artist is filled with photos of Fomison, his friends and family – but there are no images of Fomison’s work itself. On Pages 404-to-407, Forman explains that Fomison’s family did not allow any of Fomison’s paintings to be reproduced. The result is that the reader [unless he or she has an archive of Fomison’s work] cannot really visualise what the artist was producing. It is as if this fascinating book has been sabotaged.
Thus for my general review, but you would be very annoyed if I left it at that. so let’s get to the main things Forman says about Fomison’s life and work.
The life of Tony Fomison (born 1939; died 1990) was often erratic, sometimes sordid and taking a long time before he really became engaged with painting. He was born and raised in a working-class suburb of Christchurch. Life-long he boasted about his working-class origins and he was always ready to rant about the bourgeoisie – a common affectation among painters and poets when they want to boost their prestige with their mates. Young Tony Fomison was a sickly child, asthmatic and extremely self-conscious about his lean and spindly legs. At school he was very much a loner, finding it hard to make friends. Years later, says Mark Forman, Tony Fomison claimed that he never wanted to socialise. He didn’t do well at school, but he loved drawing and read voraciously. In his two years at art school, he always got C-minus grades.
Surprisingly, as a teenager, Fomison began to take a great interest in the Maori rock carvings which could be found in South Canterbury. He studied them on his own, cycling to distant sites and drawing his impressions of the carvings. He became, in effect, an “amateur archaeologist”… but his interest went further than that. He was later to write and have published articles, in reputable journals, papers about the rock formations. There was even the possibility that he could become a full-time archaeologist, but in his early 20’s he turned to more interest in painting with a side-interest in sculpture. A few of his paintings were sold. More important, he was awarded a scholarship to study art in London and Paris. Knowing that expressionism has run its course, he was first interested in modernist works like those of Francis Bacon with his contorted images of people in some sort of agony. These had a profound influence on Fomison’s later work, but even more influencing him were the paintings he saw by Goya, Caravaggio and other masters of the late Renaissance. In that situation, though he was never a Christian, he became very interested in the image of Jesus and he was later to paint many images of Christ, though most often as Christ either dead or in agony. Some critics have carped over the fact that Fomison was so influenced by classic European art. There was [and in some quarters still is] a prejudice that New Zealand painters should paint only New Zealand themes.
All this so far makes it sound as if Fomison was on a steady course as an artist. But this was far from the case. From the time he had left his parents’ home, he had tended to live in various places of squalor. It was when he was in London and Paris that he became addicted to hard drugs, moving from amphetamines to heroin and trying to make a living as a dishwasher. In Paris he was jailed for three weeks for vagrancy and by the time he returned to London, he was deeply depressed and seriously considered suicide. He had abandoned painting. His sister Julia, who was a nurse, managed to get him put in the Banstead psychiatric hospital, where he stayed for three months. He dried out a little, although the destructive drug culture remained with him and he was still able to access drugs.
Now in his late 20’s he returned to New Zealand, hooked up with another drug-using painter Philip Clairmont, and tried to adjust once again to conservative Christchurch. He went back to his parents home until his father kicked him out. He had a hard time getting back to painting, painted versions of Christ but also painting distorted images of people gurning [making grotesque faces]. Mark Forman makes it clear that, despite his bohemian way of life and his general slovenly presentation, he was capable of dressing himself respectably when he needed to – especially when he resumed his interest in the Maori stone carvings and dealt with museums and experts in the field. By the early 1970’s, the drug LSD was banned in New Zealand. Fomison had used the drug, so he now ran on opioids - as well as heroin. In 1972 he tried to get off opioids and took the methadone treatment. Many younger painters of his generation claimed that hard drugs inspired their work. Police raided the house where he lived and he spent six weeks in prison – but there he was given the opportunity to paint. Being allowed to paint five hours a day got him back to painting regularly. The first real exhibition of his work made him better known. Mark Forman explains carefully how Fomison’s styles and techniques in painting had changed. He now often painted on hessian and, with much difficulty, he had mastered the art of working with oil paints – something that had previously daunted him. Fomison’s paintings were often dark, and his images of Christ were mainly of the corpse of Christ.
It is only when we are about half-way through Tony Fomison – Life of the Artist that Mark Forman deals with Fomison’s sexuality. In mid-career Fomison fell in love with the very middle-class painter Marc Way. Marc was gay but, much as he admired some of Fomison’s work, he was not interested in having any sexual relationship with him. In fact, Marc Way was repelled by Fomison’s messy and disorderly life. Fomison tried to become part of the gay community but he never got further than going to some dances organised by gays and he never had a real gay friend. He remained what he had been when he was a teenager – a loner. Gay or not, the hard fact is that, in domestic matters, the people who tried most to help him were women. For three years Diane Perham propped him up, made sure he was fed, tried to keep his house orderly, until the moody painter became intolerable. It is a hard fact that many creative people are often self-obsessed and ignorant of other people’s needs. Thus with Fomison. Later Daphne and then Emily Karaka helped him out for a while, but it always ended with them being repelled by him.
Fomison made the decision to move to Auckland where he, at different times, lived in Grafton, Ponsonby and Grey Lynn, usually renting old and in some cases nearly decrepit houses. Only later in his life, when he was in his 40’s, did he get a mortgage for a house of his own – and then he aimed for what would look more like respectability.
Fomison painted some images based on Maori culture, but at least one Maori pundit objected to a Pakeha dabbling in Maori beliefs and legends [more recently – after Fomison’s death – it has become necessary for Pakeha to apologise should they deal with Maori lore]. However, living in Ponsonby, which had not yet become the gentrified and expensive Auckland suburb that it now is, there were many Pasifika people, especially Samoans. Some were Fomison’s neighbours and he soon found comradeship with them. This was in the era when the conservative Prime Minister Robert Muldoon was encouraging the police to carry out “dawn raids” to round up “over-stayers” - Pasifika people who had overrun the time they were given visas to work in New Zealand. [More level-headed people pointed out that there were far more British and Australian “over-stayers” in New Zealand, but Muldoon ignored that.] In that climate Fomison sided with the Samoans and became more interested in their culture. This led to something that is still controversial. Undergoing much pain, Fomison submitted to having the traditional Samoan tatau – the sacred tattoo that elite Samoan male adolescents were given – carved upon his body. It was a long and painful process – and unfortunately there were complications and his blood was poisoned. Much medical help was needed to cure him… and there were some Samoans who believed that Fomison did not have the right to have the tatau. And when Fomison eventually visited Samoa – together with a film-crew led by Geoff Stevens – he discovered that he really didn’t fit into Samoan culture at all. Nevertheless he had painted the mural the “Ponsonby Madonna” for the Catholic boys’ school St. Paul, where most of the teenaged boys were Samoan. The Blessed Virgin Mary was depicted as a Samoan woman and Jesus, also depicted as Samoan, was presented as a teenager, not a baby in his mother’s arms.
Mark Forman has perforce to tell us much about the art galleries Fomison had to deal with and the people who ran those [public or commercial] galleries – fixing the prices for paintings that were there to be sold, organising an artist’s exhibition, sending out invitations to art critics etc. The art critics could be positive or negative about Fomison’s achievement. Forman makes it clear that there had been many “schools” of painting about which the critics could quarrel. Very much influenced by Toss Woollaston (who mainly painted landscapes) and even more influenced by Colin McCahon, Fomison early agreed that some sort of human figure should be important in a painting – a representation of human conundrums. One critic claimed that Fomison had become New Zealand leading painter. By contrast, the critic Francis Pound still clung to the merit of abstract art [mainly influenced by American trends] and saw little merit in Fomison’s work.
By the mid 1980’s, it was clear to many of his friends that Fomison was “losing it”. He did wildly eccentric things, forgot people’s names, or couldn’t remember basic things. It is easy to believe that his huge intake of illicit drugs hadn’t helped his brain [not that Mark Forman dwells on this]. But by this stage he was more hooked on alcohol than on drugs. Nevertheless, he was given a residency in the Rita Angus Cottage in Wellington… though he didn’t much like it and thought it was inadequate for a place where he could paint. Later he went to Coromandel and spent some time with the influential potter Barry Brickell, who had strong ideas about using nature as the way to express ones ideas. Fomison liked Brickell but their relationship was brief.
As 1990 approached, it was clear that many of Fomison’s fellow painters were dropping out of sight or dying. Philip Claremont had hanged himself. It was also clear that Fomison was turning back to more traditional inspirations. The problem of trying to identify himself with other ethnicities led him, in his final days, to paint a number of paintings based on characters in Shakespeare’s plays. Overwhelmed by his consumption of alcohol, his system gradually broke down. In 1990, he went to Waitangi on Waitangi Day, but his body gave in, he fell and was injured, was rushed to the Whangarei hospital, and died on 7th February 1990. He was 50 years old. Mark Forman notes that Fomison’s funeral was directed by a churchman who spoke of Fomison as if he were a saint… even though Fomison was not a religious person. Many friends and fellow art people and Fomison’s mother and some members of his family were present.
There is no doubt that Tony Fomison was an important and influential New Zealand painter. But, as Forman makes clear, he was not always a person you would not want to deal with. Often he could be completely aggressive, deliberately provoking or insulting people. He would turn up when invited to parties and would then abuse his host. His behaviour towards the women who helped him was often appalling. Emily Karaka left him after an event [not entirely Fomison’s fault] when she was injured in his house. He had a violent fight with his estranged brother Michael. And there were many petulant public displays. The most notorious was when he had designed some posters for a play production of Kafka’s Metamophosis. Invited to sit in the front row, Fomison spent the whole play heckling the actors and making his own rude comments on what he thought of the play. The audience tried to shut him up to no avail. When the play was over, the play’s director [Raymond Hawthorne] confronted Fomison and said “How would you like it if I came to one of your exhibitions and wrote shit over your paintings?’ (Quoted pg. 279)… not as if Fomison would have been phased by being chastised. Why did Fomison so often behave this way? It’s easy to speculate. All the drugs and booze would have broken down his inhibitions. There was his sense of being an outsider and not having many real friends – an attitude he had had since childhood. His uncertain attitude to sex and his experience of not being fully accepted by the gay community. His shame about the shape of his body etc. etc. etc. These are mere guesses on my part and – of course – I could be completely wrong. But there was something that made him too often unable to deal reasonably with other people.
Enough of this speculation! The fact is, many great
painters were eccentric, misanthropic, misogynist, sadistic or whatever, doing
cruel things to other people . Caravaggio probably committed murder and had an
unhealthy interest in teenaged boys. Eric Gill had incestuous relations with is
daughters. Both Rodin and Picasso sexually abused the women who posed for them…
and so on. Not that Fomison had ever done anything as bad as that, but it remains
true that many creative people are so absorbed in their work and ideas that
they regard other people as less important than they are, and therefore not to
be considered. If we pass some sort of judgment on artists, we should first and
foremost be interested in what the painter has created and leave the biography
behind. Like the person or not, Fomison was
a major figure in New Zealand art, sometimes daring, sometimes provocative,
sometimes very earnest and willing to change styles when he knew one sets of
inspiration had been exhausted. Mark Forman knows this and has correctly saluted
Fomison.
Pompous Footnote: I was so annoyed that this book lacked images of Fomison’s paintings, that I went to some art galleries and found a few of Fomison’s works… whereupon I, with my very limited pocket camera, took some [amateurish and slightly cockeyed] photos. Here they are.
At the Auckland Art Gallery, I took a snap of Fomison’s Skull Face, a frightful image of a face decaying.
Also at the Auckland Art Gallery I snapped Fomison’s Not Just a Picnic, a little didactic but apparently being an allegory of human life – woman, infant, young man, adult man.
And recently while visiting the Dunedin Art Gallery, I took a shot of Fomison’s Dying Beggar By Ceruti, an example of his making use of Renaissance works. In my view, this painting might as well be one of Formison’s paintings of the dead or dying Christ.
However I do acknowledge that if you look up Fomison on line, you will be able to see many of his works