Art that conveys a sense of motion
New Rhythms: Art, Dance and Movement in London 1911-1915 was originally on show earlier this year at Kettle’s Yard in Cambridge and Harewood, which holds a number of Gaudier-Brzeska works, is the only other venue to receive the exhibition.
It is a compelling collection of work exploring Gaudier-Brzeska’s engagement with the challenge of depicting movement in art and considers the cultural setting – Edwardian London – in which he was working.
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Hide AdBorn in St Jean de Baye near Orleans, Gaudier-Brzeska moved to London in 1911 with his partner Polish writer and artist Sophie Brzeska, eighteen years his senior, with whom he had an intense symbiotic relationship. Although Gaudier-Brzeska frequently asked Sophie to be his wife, they never married. Poignantly, the last time he proposed to her was from the trenches of the First World War where he died in 1915 aged 23. Their story formed the basis of Ken Russell’s biopic Savage Messiah.
It is remarkable what Gaudier-Brzeska achieved and the contribution he made to the development of modern art in his short life – from the age of 18 up to his death he created 100 sculptures and 1000 drawings.
“He was from a poor background with no formal training but he was completely driven,” says Nicola Stephenson, Exhibitions and Projects Producer at Harewood. “His output was extraordinary, really. When you look at his work you can see that he was constantly experimenting and there is that ‘what if’ feeling – you wonder what he might have gone on to achieve if he hadn’t died so young.”
Gaudier-Brzeska arrived in London at an exciting time and became a key member of the Vorticist movement – a group of artists and intellectuals which included Ezra Pound, Wyndham Lewis and William Roberts. “It was all about the energy of the new modern world,” says Stephenson. “The old Victorian world had been swept away and they were looking forward to the possibilities of the 20th century.”
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Hide AdMuch of the youthful creative potential of that new century, including Gaudier-Brzeska’s, was to be snuffed out by the coming war. Also at that time, there was an explosion of interest in new trends, nightclubs and jazz – and Diaghilev’s Ballet Russes. “We think Gaudier-Brzeska went to see Diaghilev’s production of The Firebird which came to London in 1912,” says Stephenson. “That is what inspired his famous sculpture Firebird – which is from the Harewood collection. It was Gaudier-Brzeska’s second commission and it captures the moment when the firebird is trying to escape from the prince.”
It is a perfect example of Gaudier-Brzeska’s fascination with ‘transitional movement’ – that point in time when there is a shift from one position to another. There are some beautifully simple drawings that also illustrate this, such as The Stag, Two Elephants Fighting and Female Nude, in which he creates a palpable sense of motion. You can almost feel the energy, excitement and invention from his works, more than a century on.