Friday, 2 March 2012

Cadell the Colourist

F C B Cadell was born in 1883 the year of Manet's death. It somehow seems appropriate. All the Scottish colourists were Francophile in their outlook and Manet and then Impressionism and Fauvism in general were so important for them all. They took something from France and yet they kept their own individuality. Cadell was certainly concerned with style.Some may say that there is too much style and too little content but give the man credit for what he does and within that narrow field his work is extraordinary. Everything is calculated and the ability to organise strong colour is extraordinary. Compare him with Matisse if you like-neither has anything profound to say about the human condition-and Matisse next to Cadell seems something of an incompetent.Within his limits Cadell is the more perfect artist.

This organisation of extraordinary colour combinations in paintings with strong designs is a difficult feat for anyone. Cadell's success is quite unusual.He went to Paris to study independently at age 16. No doubrt his family friend Arthur Melville encouraged him on his way. There was also a short time spent in Munich when the Cadell family were there-but there is nothing Teutonic about his work.It is interesting that he has mentioned Raeburn as an early interest. You can see that Cadell would admire his freshness and suavity.

On Iona he and Peploe painted gorgeous landscapes on their numerous visits. Cadell seems to have felt the need to put in small human figures-at just the right point in the composition to enliven the work. A figure or a yacht, they are always in just the right place.

TECHNICAL NOTE

I have never seen so many paintings under glass as those I saw in Edinburgh on my recent visit. I had thought that this was perhaps just an old-fashioned Scottish habit. But I learn from the Cadell catalogue that he and Peploe got into the habit of painting on a gesso ground. It seems to be this which makes the later paintings have this matte chalky surface.In effect the binder is sucked out of the paint and into the ground.There should be a a barrier between the ground or the paint or the paint becomes unworkable and cannot be pushed about.This can be attractive in its way. On the back of one of his Iona paintings Cadell has written,"Absorbent ground, never varnish".If you do not varnish a painting and yet want to preserve this chalky, impressionist ideal, what can you do? You put the picture under glass.This will help to keep the surface clean.It would otherwise be difficult to remove surface marks, there being no glossy,hard surface from which marks can easily be removed.Vuillard had similar concerns with his distemper paintings-which again should not be varnished.They tell me that the varnishing problem has been solved for acrylics. Perhaps it has.

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