Georges Bernède French, 1926-2023
Signed and dated verso
Inventory number 83
Though the Second World War brought many changes in its wake, the profoundly conservative artistic communities of Bordeaux would not warm to Abstraction until the late 1950s, decades after it had become a recognised movement in Paris. Bernède would continuously push the boundaries of the accepted, remarking: “My style was innovative, and therefore, unsettling.” The post-war years heralded exciting and innovative styles of Abstraction on both sides of the Atlantic. New York’s Abstract Expressionism and Action Painting echoed in its European counterpart known as ‘Art Informel’, with its sub-variants of Lyrical Abstraction and Tachism. These styles involved paint spontaneously dribbled, splashed, or smeared onto the canvas, rather than being carefully applied. The resulting work usually emphasised the physical act or ‘geste’ (gesture) of painting itself as an essential aspect of the finished work. Bernède first turned to Lyrical Abstraction during the early 1960s, producing works of greater spontaneity, with occasional suggested imagery, his colour palette a riot of rich earthy tones and vibrant blues and greens.
Yet, in his continuous search to express the essence of life, to establish an analogy to musical rhythm and to touch the viewer deep in their subconscious, Bernède gradually grew into a purer form of gestural painting. This he partnered with a predominantly black and white palette. Whilst being deceptively subtle, these paintings have a dynamic, instinctive, and dramatic impact and are characterised by Bernède’s intuitive and energetic application of paint. His works are accessible and easily understood, for they evoke the collective sense of an archetypal visual language, seeking to aid a civilisation’s understanding of the world through heightened self-consciousness and awareness (a concept adopted by the Action painters from Freud and Jung.)
Although his work bears obvious similarities to that of Franz Kline, Bernède was never an imitator, for with Matisse as a starting point, his style evolved instinctively through disciplined research and progress, as his artistic development over the years testifies. Bernède first turned to Lyrical Abstraction during the early 1960s. Yet, in his continuous search to express the essence of life, to establish an analogy to musical rhythm and to touch the viewer deep into the subconscious mind, Bernède gradually grew to gestural painting. Whilst being deceptively subtle, these paintings have a dynamic, spontaneous and dramatic impact through the energetic application of the paint.
Provenance
The Artist
Exhibitions
2012, Georges Bernède, Whitford Fine Art, London
2021, BENDALL / BERNÈDE: A Story of Painting in Bordeaux, Whitford Fine Art, London.
Literature
Georges Bernède, exhibition catalogue with introduction by An Jo FERMON, Whitford Fine Art, London, 2012, cat. no.2.
BENDALL / BERNEDE: A Story of Painting in Bordeaux, exhibition catalogue with introduction by A.J. Fermon, Whitford Fine Art, London, 2021, cat. no. 21, ill.