We feature each fortnight Nicholas Reid's reviews and comments on new and recent books.
“COLIN
McCAHON: THERE IS ONLY ONE DIRECTION. Volume 1, 1919-1959” by Peter Simpson
(Auckland University Press, $NZ 75); “MOPHEAD” by Selins Tusitala Marsh
(Auckland University Press, $NZ 27:99)
2019
is the centenary of the birth of Colin McCahon (1919-1987), regarded by many as
New Zealand’s most iconic painter. The most significant event related to this is
likely to be the publication of Peter Simpson’s two-volume survey of McCahon’s
life and work. The first volume is Colin
McCahon: There is Only One Direction. 1919-1959. The second volume, Colin McCahon: Is This the Promised Land? 1960-1987,
is scheduled to appear in May 2020.
With
this publication, Peter Simpson again confirms his position as one of the most
distinguished chroniclers of our artistic and literary history, as already evidenced
in his Bloomsbury South and his
editing of the Charles Brasch Journals1958-1973 (both reviewed on this blog). His author’s preface to Colin McCahon: There is Only One Direction
gives a detailed account of his long connection with McCahon’s work, as both
curator and author of catalogues and explanatory books about the artist. He
tells us that the book’s title comes from McCahon’s comment that a poet or
artist needs “one direction” – a clear
vision or concept to guide his work, even if the subject of that vision
changes.
To
make one clear bibliographic comment, this
is a large and capacious book, just shy of 360 pages (including index,
bibliography and scrupulous notes and references). I’m sure Simpson wouldn’t take
offence at the remark that, while his text is excellent, among the book’s chief
attractions are the large reproductions of McCahon’s work, often spread over
two broad pages. In effect, the book itself becomes an accessible gallery of
McCahon’s major paintings. Spending time with them is as important as spending
time with the text.
Simpson’s
prose style is clear, clean and unambiguous. Unlike some writers on the fine
arts, who appear to be addressing a coterie or in-group, Simpson is aware that
he is writing for a wide audience. As he says in his Introduction, “this book is intended not only for the
already knowledgeable but also for those reading about McCahon for the first
time.” (p.21) As well as glossing some art-related terms in his text, he
does not hestitate to explain who certain well-known artists and writers were. This
does not mean writing down to the reader. It means that there are none of the
wilful mystifications one finds in some works on art (especially postmodern
ones), which seem designed to put up barriers against the hoi-polloi.
Simpson
is at pains to note that Colin McCahon:
There is Only One Direction is not really a biography. Though it is
arranged in chronological order, and though it does give an account of the
artist’s life, its focus is on the man’s career and it is primarily an
exploration of his work and development as an artist. Simpson reiterates this
sentiment in his “Conclusion”. This volume finishes when we are almost two-thirds
of the way through Colin McCahon’s life, because that is almost exactly halfway
through his career as an artist. Hence the second volume will explore just as
much artistic ground as the first.
Nevertheless,
the biographical contents are important. Born in Timaru, Colin McCahon spent
most of his younger life in Dunedin and Oamaru. He hated being a pupil at Otago
Boys’ High School and managed to persuade his parents to send him to the Dunedin
School of Art instead. Although Dunedin was where his parents lived, and although
he visited them often, in later life he came to loathe Dunedin. In the late
1930s and early 1940s, he moved between Nelson, Dunedin and Wellington, often
following seasonal labouring jobs, as painting in itself did not provide an
income to support a family. In 1942, when he was 23, he married fellow-artist
Anne Humblett, and they settled in Christchurch for a number of years. In the 1950s
he made the major shift to Auckland’s westernmost, semi-rural suburb of
Titirangi, in the Waitakere Ranges. He
held an important position at the Auckland Art Gallery. He did not become the
gallery’s director (although he considered applying for the post) but he did
deputise before the arrival of the new director Peter Tomory. Simpson notes all
the various residences that McCahon and his family occupied, and notes the worries
they often had about making rent. But McCahon’s wife and children are left very
much in the background and are the subject of passing comments only. The
biographical narrative fades out in 1960, when McCahon and family relocated to the
inner-city Auckland suburb of Newton.
What
is more dominant is Simpson’s careful account of how McCahon’s style changed,
and the way different artists influenced him at various stages of his career.
Toss Woollaston was an important early influence, when McCahon was almost
exclusively a landscape painter, interested in geomorphology (the basic shape
and structure of the land) and stripping landscapes down to unpopulated and
treeless images. At that stage there was the strong influence of Cezanne and
the earlier impressionists. A major change in McCahon’s artistic focus came
when in he was in Nelson in 1948-49. In place of the people-less landscapes, he
painted New Testament scenes of the Crucifixion, the Annunciation and the
Resurrection, all placed in recognisably New Zealand settings. He now claimed
as his masters the (religious) painters of Renaissance Italy. Simpson is very
careful to note this was no sudden religious “conversion”, as McCahon had
always had some sort of religious sensibility. After his move to Auckland, and
after visits to Australia where he received some tuition, McCahon had greater
awareness of cubism and a new way of conceiving of physical forms. There
followed his Titirangi paintings of kauri
and of French Bay and his move into abstraction. His paintings had always been “symbolic”
rather than “representational”, but this was a major change.
Colin McCahon: There is Only One
Direction ends at the point when he
had been for four months in the United States in 1958, and had seen art with
which he was previously unfamiliar. He was moving to the greater use of words
and script as part of his artistic expression. This was to lead into those
stark black, white and grey canvases with verbal statements – but wording was
not entirely new in his paintings as he had already made much use of speech
bubbles in his earlier religious art.
As
Simpson documents it, McCahon was very reliant on a close circle of friends and
correspondents when he needed moral support, especially as his work was so
often controversial and attracted much loud, and public, negative criticism.
The first such controversy was in 1939, when the Otago Arts Society rejected
the 20-year-old McCahon’s first well-known painting, “Harbour Cone from Penny’s
Hill”. In solidarity with him, some other artists withdrew their work from the
OAS exhibition. Later, A.R.D. Fairburn and Denis Glover loathed his religious
paintings, and wrote barbs against them. McCahon’s sometime mentor and patron Charles
Brasch was, at first, also very negative about the overtly religious works, but
he later changed his mind. Most condemned of all were the text-dominated
canvases that came later.
It
is hard to explore McCahon without at some stage discussing the religious
element in his work. In his Introduction, Simpson considers McCahon’s religious
art and the matter of whether he was, or was not, a Christian. McCahon had a
conventional Presbyterian upbringing and was for a while associated with the
Quakers. A crucial point in his life was when, as a young man he “found his own god”. As Simpson
notes “Landscape and religion were never entirely separate in McCahon’s
imagination.” (p.39). God, or belief of some sort, was implicit in
landscape itself. Yet this could suggest a vague sort of pantheism, and the
obvious fact is that, in two major phases of his career, McCahon’s terms of
reference were specifically Christian ones. This is apparently an embarrassment
to some commentators; and non-believers who wish to see McCahon’s work in
purely aesthetic terms can point to a few letters and comments where the artist
disavowed any specific form of belief. This rather ignores the fact that doubt
is, and has always been, an essential part of religious faith. Few thinking
believers have “blind faith”, and questioning God or dogma has always been part
of the religious experience (check out sometime “dark nights of the soul” from
Augustine to John of the Cross to Therese of Lisieux and others). Simpson says “Such questions of belief and disbelief were
never finally settled for McCahon, but – to the undoubted benefit of his
painting – were matters of continuous ongoing self-exploration and struggle.”
(p.57) Quite so. If all the Elias paintings (there is a generous display of
them at pp.308-313) are about “misunderstanding” and “doubt”, they are still
firmly in the religious tradition.
Both
visually and in terms of its commentary, Colin
McCahon: There is Only One Direction is a rich and rewarding book. I hope
this judgment is implicit in all the above comments. I’ll conclude with a
couple of minor matters.
First,
as a barbarous philistine, I found it endearing that McCahon apparently loved
watching Westerns when he went to the movies (Chapter 3) – their horses and
sweeping plains and music. Without being precious about it, I would say this
chimes with the man who loved landscapes – and especially naked and underpopulated
landscapes waiting for some human imprint.
Second,
a little gulp of sorrow comes to the throat in reading this statement early in the book: “Throughout much of his life, McCahon was an
indefatigable letter writer, a practice that with the advent of personal
conmputers has virtually disappeared.” (p.20) Simpson isn’t the first
to note this, but it does at once suggest how hard it will be for future
biographers to get at the intimate thoughts of people from our own era.
Some purely personal responses:
I’ve
already finished my review of Colin
McCahon: There is Only One Direction; but I thought I’d add a few purely
subjective remarks.
In
his Introduction, Simpson notes, correctly, that people who like one phase of
McCahon’s artistic development often do not like another. He sees the great
divide in opinion relating to the change in McCahon’s techniques
after his 4-month trip to the USA in 1958. In other words, people who like the
earlier McCahon landscapes and (more-or-less “representational”) religious
paintings, tend not to like the later abstractions, cubism and text paintings –
and vice versa. Personally, the text paintings interest me, as do the Titirangi
kauri paintings. But irremovably embedded in my mind are the early landscapes,
and I think it has to do with my early exposure to them in childhood. McCahon’s
masterly “Otago Peninsula 1946-49” slapped me in the eye as soon as I first saw
it on display in Otago, and for years a postcard reproduction of it has been
pinned, by a thumb-tack, to my study wall. It’s a masterpiece. I saw “On
Building Bridges – triptych” (painted in 1952) on dsplay in the Auckland City
Art Gallery as a child, and of course, having a logical child’s mind, couldn’t
figure out why the three pieces did not neatly fit together. Now I think I get
it. But the really iconic painting for me (and I’m sorry that it comes so early
in McCahon’s career) is “Takaka, night and day”, painted in 1948. Again, this
was a childhood encounter in the Auckland City Art Gallery. I recall an adult
saying that the hills looked like upraised knees, and ever since, I’ve detected
an implicit anthropomorphism in much of McCahon’s early, people-less,
landscapes. Even more mysterious was the concept of night and day in one
canvas. This is still the painting I first think of when I think of McCahon.
All three of these paintings are reproduced in Colin McCahon: There is Only One Direction.
Here’s
a second, unrelated, comment. I’m surprised Simpson does not make more of the
French artist Georges Rouault. I grew up in a house where there was a framed
print of Rouault’s “The Old King” hung at the entrance to our playroom – a very
daunting image which I remember thinking was a representation of King Herod. When I looked at “Fifteen
Drawings for Charles Brasch” (pp.174-175 of Colin
McCahon: There is Only One Direction) they struck me as being in exactly
the same style as Rouault’s work on similar themes. I viewed a gallery of Rouault’s
work, in a side-room of the church of Saint Severin, when I was on a trip to
Paris 2017; and McCahon immediately popped into my mind. The similarity is
unignorable. But Colin McCahon: There is
Only One Direction has only one passing mention of Rouault (p.129).
* * *
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I’m dealing very briefly with Selina Tusitala Marsh’s enjoyable
picture-book Mophead not because I’m
giving it the flick, but because I can say very briefly what it is and who its
prime auduence is.
Mophead is a sturdily bound hardback telling an inspirational
story in pictures as much as in words. It was both written and illustrated by
Samoan-Palagi poet Selina Tusitala Marsh, New Zealand’s first Pasifika Poet
Laureate. As a kid, she was often
ridiculed by others at school for her huge mop of frizzy hair, and she earned
the nickname “mophead”. Embarrassed, she tried to tie up and control her hair
until a talk at school by Sam Hunt told her that it was best to be herself. So
now she rejoices in her mop of hair as an expression of who she is (a bit like
Cyrano de Bergerac and his proud nose). And she has carried her trademark
mop confidently into the various adventures of her adult life.
The
pictures are lively and expressive, the text is bold and the message is clear.
I can see Mophead going down very
well with schoolchildren who need a bit of encouragement and confidence, and
that is the book’s target audience. I am happily passing it on to one of my
teenage grand-daughters.
Any misgivings? Much of it is self-promotion (I
sang before the Queen, I met President Obama etc.). But I guess that’s part of
the self-confidence the book is promoting.
Thank you to Reid the reviewer: reliable & in NZ a rarity. Also thanks to Colin McCahon for being one of us.To Peter Simpson catching up #NZ & the cultural life of once was colony.
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