Lot 17
  • 17

SIR PETER BLAKE, R.A. | Strong Man, 1

Estimate
150,000 - 250,000 GBP
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Description

  • Sir Peter Blake, R.A.
  • Strong Man, 1
  • oil on board with collaged elements
  • 62 by 15.5cm.; 24½ by 6in.
  • Executed in 1957.

Provenance

Acquired by Stella Chasteen in London in the 1950s

Exhibited

London, Institute of Contemporary Arts, Five Painters: John Barnicoat, Peter Blake, Peter Coviello, William Green, Richard Smith, 9th January - 8th February 1958, cat. no.14.

Condition

The panel appears to be sound and the collage elements secure. The panel is uneven in places, with some minor nicks, rubbings, incisions and gauges to the edges and surface that appear to be in inherent to the panel, in keeping with the Artist's working methods or historic. Additionally, there are a very small number of nicks and small flecks of loss to the work, including towards the left edge above centre, one very small speck of loss to the face above the left proper eyebrow, towards the right edge above the lower right corner, and at the upper right corner. These are all only visible upon very close inspection. There are very fine lines of craquelure to the black pigments in places, where it appears the Artist has added bitumen to the pigment. The varnish may have slightly discoloured over time. There is surface dirt, particularly to creviced areas. There is an unfinished pencil study to the reverse of the work. This excepting, the work appears in very good overall condition. Inspection under ultraviolet light reveals fluorescence in line with the Artist's working methods and materials. The work is unframed. Please telephone the department on +44 (0) 207 293 6424 if you have any questions regarding the present work.
"In response to your inquiry, we are pleased to provide you with a general report of the condition of the property described above. Since we are not professional conservators or restorers, we urge you to consult with a restorer or conservator of your choice who will be better able to provide a detailed, professional report. Prospective buyers should inspect each lot to satisfy themselves as to condition and must understand that any statement made by Sotheby's is merely a subjective, qualified opinion. Prospective buyers should also refer to any Important Notices regarding this sale, which are printed in the Sale Catalogue.
NOTWITHSTANDING THIS REPORT OR ANY DISCUSSIONS CONCERNING A LOT, ALL LOTS ARE OFFERED AND SOLD AS IS" IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE CONDITIONS OF BUSINESS PRINTED IN THE SALE CATALOGUE."

Catalogue Note

We are grateful to the Artist for his kind assistance with the cataloguing of the present work.

‘the most original of these young painters is Peter Blake. He is so unmistakably and unshakably himself that his pictures do not look like anything else that has ever been called a work of art … Most of his pictures are painted on bits of scrapped planking, they usually depict circus people in a manner somewhat reminiscent of Victorian posters, and the painted titles are part of the image… The painted image is partly scrubbed out, as if to give it the look of an ancient panel, and then bits of the clothing are "restored" with coloured tin-foil. The clash between paint and tin-foil recreates in a remarkable way the noise, the garish lights and the tawdry finery.’ (Architectural Review, April 1958, review of Five Painters at the Institute of Contemporary Arts, featuring the present work)

Unseen in public for well over half a century Peter Blake’s Strong Man, 1 comes from a small group of works created by the artist whilst still in his early 20s, fresh from studying at London’s Royal College of Art. This small handful of proto-Pop paintings that Blake produced in the mid- to late-1950s form the nucleus of some of the most important and lasting influences over the artist’s later work. In works such as Strong Man, 1, as well as Loelia, World’s Most Tattooed Lady (1955, Private Collection) and Siriol, She-Devil of Naked Madness (1957, Private Collection) the artist explored his fascination with characters that populated the fringes of society, as well as his love of nostalgia. As Blake later commented; ‘I paint about the life I knew. It isn’t Victoriana, it’s nostalgia, or rather a sentimentality, for my childhood, but its also a feeling for what’s going on now – an emotion’ (Peter Blake quoted in Peter Blake, Patrick Caulfield, Howard Hodgkin: Paintings from the 60s and 70s, exh. cat., Waddington Galleries, London, 1995, p.8).

The works that Blake produced during this period, executed on found and discarded wooden boards, become objects – relic-like – worked and scarred by the hand of the artist and the imagined passing of time. The paint surface is rubbed and blistered, taking on an antique appearance, and reference some fading memory of childhood experiences. With the application of collaged elements to the strong man’s neck chain and belt, and the bold, circus-style typography the work harks back to memories of a world which by the 1950s had all but disappeared. This sense of ‘Englishness’ is clearly something that fascinated the artist and the most popular pastime of the circus, in all its faded glory, in particular. As a student at the Royal College, each Christmas between 1953 and 1956 Blake was allowed backstage at Bertram Mill’s circus at London’s Olympia to observe the performers, once finding himself sketching alongside the grand dame of the British art scene, Laura Knight, who was also a frequent visitor to the circus. He later recalled ‘It was also around that time I painted those first images of tattooed ladies and strong men’ (Peter Blake, Port, 4th December 2014, unpaginated). Blake was to be inspired not only by the subjects he studied there, but also the broader visual style of the circus, with bright, bold lettering that was to appear in many of his works from the period.

Included in one of the artist’s first public exhibitions at the Institute of Contemporary Arts in 1958, Strong Man, 1 was acquired by a young art student living in London at the time – purchased as the very best of the contemporary British art scene. And today, sixty years on, the work is still as fresh and immediate as it must have appeared back then. A painting full of wit, which holds a key place in the work of one of Britain’s greatest living painters.