Matthew Smith (1879-1959)

There is a growing interest in the work of Matthew Smith after a period of relative neglect. At Tate Britain he has been included in a room given over to the painterly approach, now considered fundamental to British art. No longer is Smith simply consigned to the English Fauve pigeonhole, but is seen as a wider part of a tradition of artists intimately concerned with the materiality of paint. It’s a traditional that goes back to Titian, Turner and Constable, and one which was prevalent in 20th century British art. It can be traced through the cunning pictorial inventions of Sickert and the doughty expressiveness of Bomberg, and is recognised to have absorbed something from that great master of the heavy swinging brushstroke and fierce colour, Chaim Soutine (1894-1943). The Tate display juxtaposed Smith with Bomberg as well as Bacon (quoting Bacon’s famous high assessment of Smith), and traced the line on into the work of Frank Auerbach and Leon Kossoff.

The type of paint application which defines artists in this tradition oscillates between a fluid and a more encrusted mode, with Smith established in all his impassioned fluidity. Although well known, Bacon’s remarks are worth quoting once again as they penetrate to the very heart of the matter. Bacon wrote of Smith: ‘He seems to me to be one of the very few English painters since Constable and Turner to be concerned with painting – that is, with attempting to make idea and technique inseparable. Painting in this sense tends towards a complete interlocking of image and paint, so that the image is the paint, and vice versa. Here the brush stroke creates the form and does not merely fill it in. Consequently every movement of the brush on the canvas alters the shape and implications of the image. ‘

Andrew Lambirth, Matthew Smith, Landscapes, Crane Kalman, 2010

Matthew Smith (1879-1959), Dieppe Harbour, 1926

 

£ click for price and more information

Canvas, 24 ¾ x 31 in (63 x 79 cm)
Inscribed with initials

Collections: William and Cherry Palmer
Exhibited: Crane Kalman and Bath, The Victoria Art Gallery The English Matisse: Landscapes by Matthew Smith 2010 (11)

Literature: J. Gledhill Matthew Smith Catalogue Raisonné 2009 (243) ill.

‘’Matthew Smith was the most significant-perhaps the only significant contribution made by England to the modern movement in painting ‘’ P. G. Konody,1929

Sir John Rothenstein writes: ‘’ Between 1922 and 1926 Smith evolved a vision and a method appropriate to its expression-of a quite contrary kind, a glowing vision in which passion and intuition play the dominant parts and in which the operations of the intellect count for little, the vision of an impassioned painter and an indifferent draughtsman, the paintings of Smith, entirely devoid of literary overtones though they are, are not simply exercises in what used to be called ‘significant form’, or even significant colour: they may rather be regarded as reckless, rhetorical hymns of praise to the warmth and opulence of the real world….Smith has shown himself the most authorative and personal English exponent of fauvism. The fauvism of Smith is an opulent fauvism nourished and mellowed under a Southern sun. (Rothenstein British Art since 1900 1962, p.19)

Back to Matthew Smith (1879-1959)