Peer

Andrew Lanyon

14 May - 02 Jul 2011

© Andrew Lanyon
Still Life with Lump of Uranium, 2000
ANDREW LANYON
Von Ribbentrop in St. Ives – Art and War in the Last Resort
14 May – 2 July

Andrew Lanyon talks about his work at The Bacchus Bar and Kitchen, 177 Hoxton Street, London N1, just two minutes walk from PEER.

This event is free but capacity is limted to 35, so places will be available on a first come first served basis.

Over three years artist, writer and filmmaker Andrew Lanyon created a densely rich and elaborate narrative project in both book and exhibition form. Comprising paintings, drawings, mechanical vignettes, sculptures, artefacts and texts, this gesamtkunstwerk proposes an alternative reading of events based on the historical facts, episodes and encounters that stem from German Ambassador Joachim von Ribbentrop’s brief visit to Cornwall in 1937. Throughout Lanyon’s multi-layered
presentation, idiosyncratic parallels are drawn between
the threatened Nazi invasion of Cornwall and the encroaching dominance of abstraction over realism in modernist art.

At the core of the project is a belief that by bringing together two seemingly contrasting ideas or forces – the creative and destructive impulses that are made manifest in art and war – new and what he terms ‘vivid’ concepts are unleashed. For Lanyon, Modernism – as explored in the work of recent Cornwall arrivals like Nicholson, Hepworth and Gabo – and its attack on realist traditions as explored by the artists and followers of the Newlyn School was perhaps born out of necessity as much as any aesthetic or intellectual debate.

Lanyon began this major project in 2007 and his starting point was the alleged appearance in the Invasion Handbook (published Berlin 1941) of postcards of Cornwall, which he surmises, may have been collected by von Ribbentrop during his stay. Combining satire with deadly conviction, Lanyon notes ‘in wartime, ordinary things [...] were suspected of being used to aid predators. Even rock-solid Cornish hedges could no longer be trusted...’ Taking this suspicion to its most absurdly plausible conclusion, abstraction, it would seem, could confuse the enemy and protect the Cornish coast. After all, ‘what U-boat commander in his right mind would, while approaching that deadly set of rocks, The Manacles, have allowed himself to be guided by an Alfred Wallis?’

Andrew Lanyon was born and still lives in Cornwall. He studied filmmaking in the late 60s and spent several years as a photographer presenting a major touring show The Rooks of Trelawne at The Photographer’s Gallery in 1976. He has self-published limited edition letterpress books since 1987, beginning with Deadpan, the first of the Rowley series that still continues. As well as over 30 artist’s books, he has produced larger-run publications such as A Fairy Find (Portobello Books) and Circular Walks Around Rowley Hall (Atlas Press) both 2006. He has written highly acclaimed books on his father the painter Peter Lanyon, Alfred Wallis as well as other painters, sculptors, writers and poets. During the mid 90s, alongside painting, collage and writing, Lanyon returned to filmmaking, the first was Splatt dhe Wertha (Plot for Sale), an award-winning Cornish language film directed by Bill Scott. Other films include Laughing Gas, Badly Parked Car and Fairy Questions Answered. His work is in private and public collections including the Victoria and Albert Museum, London and Museum of Modern Art, New York.
 

Tags: Alfred Wallis