Size (cm): 75x55
Price:
Sale price£204 GBP

Description

"Pilots (Airmen)", a work carried out in 1940 by the renowned Neo Zealand Artist Frances Hodgkins, represents a significant example of the surreal and modernist turn that the artist adopted during the last stages of her prolific career. Hodgkins, who began his career in a rather impressionist style, was progressively tilting towards more abstract and expressive forms as the twentieth century progressed, and "pilots (Airmen)" is a perfect sign of this evolution.

A deep look at painting reveals a complex and captivating composition. The work presents, in a dream landscape, figures that can be interpreted as pilots, although in a fairly stylized and abstract way. The pilots appear energized and fragmented, with bodies and faces that are mixed with the environment, highlighting the Hodgkins skill for the fusion of figures and background, a technique that characterized much of his work and criticized reality through a prism embellished and sometimes enigmatic.

The use of color in "pilots (Airmen)" is another aspect that deserves a special mention. Hodgkins uses a vibrant and varied palette, with predominance of earthly and blue tones that suggest both air and earth, essential elements in the life of a pilot. The colors not only define the figures, but also seem to interact with each other, creating a sense of movement and dynamism that is typical in the paintings of Hodgkins of this era.

Although painting lacks specific details that clearly define the identity of the characters represented, this indefinition is precisely what gives a universal quality to the work. The pilots, although barely discernible as such, represent any aviator, in a context that could be both peace and war. It should be remembered that the painting was made in the context of World War II, and a plausible interpretation is that Hodgkins tried to reflect the mixture of heroicity and anonymity that characterizes war pilots.

The stroke and texture in "Pilots (Airmen)" are also worthy of highlighting. Hodgkins uses seemingly thick strokes that add a tactile element to the work, suggesting not only visualization, but also a more visceral interpretation of it. The presence of more fluid and curved shapes contrasted with straight lines and acute angles allows a visual balance that keeps the viewer in constant reflection and analysis.

It is also interesting to note that "pilots (Airmen)" is not exempt from the elements that characterize Hodgkins as a key figure within modernism. Its ability to combine the representational with the abstract and its innovative use of color and shape, collapsing the distinction between figure and background, become evident in this work. The artist, who was always a traveler and explorer of new techniques and trends, shows here as a figure in full line with the avant -garde of her time.

In conclusion, "pilots (Airmen)" by Frances Hodgkins stands as a fundamental piece to understand not only the trajectory of an fundamentally innovative artist, but also a broader perspective of how modernism is intertwined with universal and timeless themes. This painting, with its intricate details and its vibrant color use, demonstrates to be both a visually attractive and intellectually stimulating work, a work that invites you to be repeatedly contemplated to discover in each new look a different nuance, a hidden story, a mystery for unravel.

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