| Michael Andrews
19 July 7 October 2001
Supported by B&Q
Introduction I Visiting
Information and Events I Room Guide I
Further Reading

Melanie and Me Swimming
Tate © Estate of Michael Andrews
'A magisterial retrospective' - The Times
'A master of British art' - The Daily Telegraph
Introduction
This exhibition provides the first opportunity to survey the entire
career of Michael Andrews (1928 - 95). A notoriously slow and painstaking
painter, during his lifetime Andrews had few solo exhibitions and,
indeed, his oeuvre is relatively small. Nevertheless, he is rightly
regarded as one of Britain's leading post-war painters.
Andrews is often linked with other artists of the so-called School
of London, notably Francis Bacon, Frank Auerbach, Lucian Freud and
Leon Kossoff. In common with these artists, Andrews's art demonstrates
a preoccupation with the depiction of the human figure and also,
like some of them, a deep involvement with the subject of landscape.
From the beginning of his career in the early 1950s, Andrews's work
was characterised by intensity of observation and exacting technical
virtuosity. He described painting as 'the most marvellous, elaborate
way of making up my mind'.
It was his firm conviction that some sense of the world and our
place within it can be formed from reflecting on human nature. For
that reason, his abiding subjects are people: the rich diversity
of human behaviour and the complex relationships that exist between
individuals and places. Even when people are not physically present
in his work - as in his paintings of balloons, fish and certain
landscapes - his images are redolent with human significance.
For Andrews, the activity of painting was a way of asking questions
about 'the nature of being' and it contained the potential for sharing
whatever insights were gained. Towards the end of his career he
observed: 'In painting, through a process of definition, I realise
how I am disposed - it is reassuring to know. As none of us are
so different we can share this realisation. . . hence strange consolation'.
Written by Paul Moorhouse and Ben Tufnell, Tate
|