The last sentence of this quotation has almost come to define
his fellow St Ives artists’ immersion in the dramatic landscape
of West Cornwall during the twenty years after 1945 when this small
fishing town became an epicentre of the British avant garde. Wells’ own
position within the development of this small community was central
through his close friendship with Ben Nicholson, Barbara Hepworth,
Naum Gabo, Peter Lanyon and others. He was a founder member of
the legendary Crypt Group with Lanyon and fellow artists of the
younger generation in 1946 and later the Penwith Society of Arts
in 1949. Throughout the 1950s Wells exhibited nationally and internationally
in many group shows of St Ives art and he was described by Patrick
Heron as ‘certainly the most important abstract painter of
his generation in Britain today’ (1950).
For all of this Wells still occupied the curious position of
being better known for what he wrote and where he exhibited than
for his distinguished artistic output. This resulted in limited
discussion of his work and the neglect of a passionate and unique
artist until his acclaimed Tate St Ives Retrospective in 1998.
The traditional account of the development of his career is that,
through visits to Gabo and correspondence with Nicholson, he undertook
a highly productive schooling in the language of Constructivism,
whilst serving during the war as the Doctor on the Scilly Isles.
This resulted in some of the purest and most refined expressions
of spatial and rhythmical harmony occurring in British art. Following
his decision in 1945 to abandon his medical career at the age of
38, Wells was seen to rapidly produce a major body of work, which
illustrated a trajectory from the radicalism of his war time experiments
to a landscape inspired abstraction, characteristic of the St Ives
school. Following a commercially successful solo exhibition held
at Waddington Galleries in 1960, Wells developed a challenging
hard edge style that tended to be ignored by critics as it fell
outside the accepted scope of St Ives style. Thus Wells has been
categorised as an artist whose outstanding constructivist beginnings
were later tamed by the Cornish landscape.
In reality, whilst other St Ives artists around him such as Lanyon,
Heron and Wynter radically altered their work in response to the
impact of mid century American painting from the mid 1950s, Wells
continued to look back to inspirations of a pre-war nature, namely
the International Modernist movement and the work of Paul Klee.
By consistently extending this abstract formal language of the
1930s within a local context, Wells achieved a unique coalition
between his scientific training, the work of his early mentors,
Nicholson and Gabo and an in depth awareness of the ancient Cornish
coastline. His romantically inspired perspective linked the formal
language of modernism with a love of landscape forms and natural
processes, extending back to Klee’s vision of a modern art
that retained a level of human spirituality. Wells also shared
with Klee, an interest in broader abstract composition such as
music and poetry, resulting in a heightened sense of academic rigour
in his work, often lacking in the work of his peers. There is a
poetic quality in his consistent search for an art that reveals
universal structures of rhythm, growth and proportion symbolising
our position in relation to the natural world. His subsequent adoption
of a more austere hard edge style in 1960 brings the search for
balance and harmony to the fore and is a wholly logical extension
of his oeuvre.
The relative critical neglect of Wells’ work and until
recently the absence of its serious evaluation, was exacerbated
by his retreat from the London art scene following what he felt
was an unsuccessful second one man show at Waddingtons in 1964.
Furthermore the public exhibition of his work being financially
unimportant, he was able to hoard many of his most significant
works at his Newlyn studio, so that with the exception of a few
examples on view at the Tate and some other public collections,
much was hidden from public scrutiny by his intense privacy.
Fifty years on the timelessness and universality of his work
can be seen for what it is. This exhibition clearly demonstrates
a consistency of vision and attachment to mid century principles
of pursuing a lyrical romanticism whilst retaining the formal language
of modernism, placing Wells alongside Klee, the late work of Gabo
and other constructivists such as Victor Pasmore, Ben Nicholson
and Jean Arp. The title of this exhibition is taken from a poem
written by Wells during the war, contemporary with his letter to
Sven Berlin, beginning this introduction. It eloquently portrays
his search for the magical meeting point between man and the elements
and stresses the international universality of his art. Wells,
an artist almost always solely associated with St Ives, also deserves
to be seen within this wider European context confirming his position
as an important and unique British constructive artist.
Matthew Rowe August 2003 |
|
Biography
1907 Born in London.
1908-21 Lived in Ditchling, Sussex.
1916-25 Educated at Epsom College.
1925-30 Studied at University College & Hospital.
1927-8 Evening classes at St Martin’s School of Art.
1928 Met Ben Nicholson and Christopher Wood in Cornwall.
1930 -6 Qualified as a doctor and spent early career working in various
hospitals.
1936-45 Moved to a medical practice at St Mary’s in the Scilly
Isles. Made frequent visits to Cornwall during the war years where he
spent time with Hepworth, Nicholson & Gabo.
1945 Moved to Anchor Studio, Newlyn, formerly the studio of Stanhope
Forbes.
1946 Co-founder of the Crypt Group, St Ives.
1949 Founder member of the Penwith Society.
1950-1 Worked with Barbara Hepworth.
1958 Awarded Arts Critics’ Prize.
1959-2000 Lived & worked in Newlyn where he died in 2000.
Selected solo exhibitions
Durlacher Gallery, New York, 1952, 1958
Waddington Galleries, 1960, 1964
Wills Lane Gallery, St. Ives, 1987
Tate St. Ives, Retrospective, The Fragile Cell,1998
Jonathan Clark Fine Art, London, 2003
Selected group exhibitions
London Museum, Lancaster House, New Movements in Art,1942
Lefevre Gallery (with Winifred Nicholson), London, 1946
Crypt Group, St. Ives, 1946-8
Downing’s Bookshop (with Hepworth, Lanyon & Nicholson), 1947
Downing’s Bookshop (with David Haughton), 1949
Salon des Realites Nouvelles, Paris, 1949
Gimpel Fils, London, British Abstract Art,1951
British Council Tour of Scandinavia, Ten English Painters,1953-4
Montreal City Art Gallery (toured Canada), Six Painters from Cornwall,1955-6
Durlacher Gallery (with Hazel Janicki), New York, 1958
Tate Gallery, Recent British Painting,1967
Richard Demarco Gallery (with W. Barns-Graham, Campbell Macphail &
Denis Mitchell), Edinburgh,1968
Sheviock Gallery, St. Ives, 1970
Whitechapel Art Gallery, London, (Arts Council tour), Decade ‘40,1972-3
Talbot Rice Art Centre, Edinburgh, Aspects of Abstract Painting in Britain
1910-1960, 1974
Plymouth City Art Gallery (Alexander Mackenzie & Denis Mitchell),
1975
Tate Gallery, St Ives - 1939-64,1985
Austin Desmond Fine Art, London, Post War British Abstract Art,1988
County Hall, Truro, A Century of Art in Cornwall 1889-1989,1989
Royal West of England Academy, Bristol, Artists from Cornwall,1992
Tate Gallery St. Ives, Opening Exhibition,1993
Montpelier Studio, St. Ives,1993
Montpelier Sandelson, St. Ives,1995
Selected bibliography
J.P.Hodin, John Wells,Quadrum 7, Brussels, 1959.
J.P.Hodin, The 1958 Art Critics’ Prize,The Studio, June 1959, vol.
157.
Plymouth City Art Gallery, Mackenzie, Mitchell & Wells,1975.
Frank Ruhrmond, Art - A Rum Business!(Interview), Aug 1985.
Wills Lane Gallery, John Wells,catalogue introduction by J.P.Hodin, 1987.
Frank Ruhrmond, John Wells,Arts Review, Aug 1987, vol. 39.
Tate St Ives Retrospective, The Fragile Cell,catalogue introduction
M. Rowe, 1998. |