Page 39 - Studio International - January 1965
P. 39

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           1
           William  Scott in front of
           Gaelic  Landscape. 1961 /2
           63  X  68 in.
           Martha  Jackson  Gallery.  New  York
           2
           Slagheap Landscape.  1952
           29  X  36 in.
           Arts Council of  Great  Britain
           3
           The Frying Pan.  1 946
           21  X  25¼ in.
           Arts Council of  Great  Britain
           4
           Figure and Still Life  ( Orange StJ/1
           Life).  1956
           48  X  60 in.
           F.  M.  Hall Collection.  University of
           Nebraska






























                                                                                     scholarships,  marrying  a  fellow  student and  travelling
                                                                                     in  Italy  and  France  where  he  organized  a  school  tJf
                                                                                     painting at Pont-Aven.  During the war he served in the
                                                                                     Royal  Engineers and  did  no  painting  at all.
                                                                                      Then,  demobbed,  he  began  teaching  at  the  Bath
                                                                                     Academy of Art in  1946, when he painted  The Frying
                                                                                     Pan, a key painting in his progress. The ingredients are
                                                                                     nothing-a  frying  pan,  a  toasting  fork,  a  bowl  on  a
                                                                                     folded cloth, assembled on a table top. We are conscious
                                                                                     of the matiere, the tension in the arrangement, the overt
                                                                                     symbolism.  The  artist,  talking  of  these  still-lives  has
                                                                                     evinced  a  certain  shyness  in  describing  his  motives,
                                                                                     implying certain erotic and sexual relationships  which
                                                                                     are scarcely necessary to comprehensive analysis. The
                                                                                     painting  none  the  less  recalls  the  gueridon  series  by
                                                                                     Braque with a more direct and simple iconography than
                                                                                     the French master of still life. Chardin too is present by
                                                                                     comparison,  for  Scott  too  imbues  his  objects  with
                                                                                     personalities  as  protagonists.
                                                                                      For the next four years, Scott proceeds to the flattening
                                                                                     of his perspective so that while the far edge of the table
                                                                                     becomes a horizon,  the pots are interchangeable with
                                                                                     boats  and  houses  and  the  two  ostensible  subject­
                                                                                     matters  become  interchangeable  and finally,  in  1963,
                                                                                     are  compromised  as  'Composition.'  Figures  for  Scott
                                                                                     have  almost  from  the  earliest  of  1938  had  the  with­
                                                                                     drawn impersonality of pots and objects. Then we find
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