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Craigie Aitchison And The Beaux Arts Generation

Wednesday, 29 Jan 2020 @ 10:00 Past Event
Craigie Aitchison and the Beaux Arts Generation
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Stepping away from his career in the law that had led him from Edinburgh to London, he enrolled at the Slade School of Fine Art, and in doing so joined an extraordinary cohort of students and tutors, many of whom exhibited at the Beaux Arts Gallery.

It was this year that he met a fellow student, Michael Andrews (1928-1995), who introduced Aitchison to Helen Lessore and her Beaux Arts Gallery in Bruton Street, where Aitchison had his first solo exhibition in 1959. He was in remarkable company: Andrews, Frank Auerbach (b.1931), Leon Kossoff (1926-2019) and Euan Uglow (1932-2000) each had their first solo exhibition at the Beaux Arts. While the early careers of all five artists were launched under Lessore’s discerning gaze, close friendships were formed, even as artistic styles diverged wildly. By the time it closed in 1965, the Beaux Arts Gallery had laid foundations for the next five decades of British art.

Craigie Aitchison and the Beaux Arts Generation focuses attention for the first time on Aitchison’s involvement in this remarkable set of post-war figure painters. Aitchison and his Beaux Arts contemporaries used the same drinking spots, visiting Muriel Belcher’s Colony Room Club, some even including portraits of each other in their paintings, and several contributed to the arts magazine X. While Aitchison, Andrews and Uglow knew each other from student days at the Slade, Auerbach and Kossoff by contrast came to the gallery from the Royal College of Art.

This exhibition makes the most of PIANO NOBILE’s recently opened second gallery at no. 96 Portland Road, Holland Park – directly opposite the gallery at no. 129. The new space will show a wide range of works by Aitchison, from the early 1950s to the 1990s. In the gallery across the street, a significant group of paintings and watercolours by Andrews will hang alongside nudes and still lifes by Uglow, and substantial early works by Auerbach and Kossoff.
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