David Spiller British, 1942-2018
Three Figures, 2002
Gouache and pencil on paper
67 x 59 cm
Signed and dated lower right
Signed, dated and titled verso
Signed, dated and titled verso
When David Spiller attended art school in London during the 1960s, he witnessed the rise of British Pop Art. Being younger than the Pop artists, Spiller developed a different approach...
When David Spiller attended art school in London during the 1960s, he witnessed the rise of British Pop Art. Being younger than the Pop artists, Spiller developed a different approach and offered another comment on the new mass-market urban culture. While Pop Art was interested in finding striking images and presenting them boldly, Spiller's focus became urban graffiti, in an approach much closer to Dubuffet or Cy Twombly. Whilst the images derive from urban themes, Spiller's paintings are overlaid with different painterly techniques, creating rich and complex surfaces. As a creator, Spiller is essentially lyrical - the images spill out with complete spontaneity. This lyricism is now a rare quality in art, and the emotion it arouses is not simply enjoyment, but gratitude.
Provenance
The Artist.
Literature
David Spiller, with introduction by Edward LUCIE-SMITH, Linda and Guy Pieters Publishers, Gent, 2007, ill.