NORWICH.- This winter, the
Sainsbury Centre is presenting an important reappraisal of the work of Ken Kiff (19352001), one of the most original artists working in Britain at the end of the twentieth century. In the first museum exhibition of Ken Kiff for almost 25 years, The Sequence focuses on a unique series of almost 200 acrylic paintings on paper, which he began in 1971 and continued to work on intermittently until his death.
The Sainsbury Centres exhibition brings together 60 of The Sequence paintings, in the largest ever presentation of works from across the series. Hung sequentially, the installation reveals the evolution of Kiffs ideas from their tentative beginnings to the expansion of key themes as the series progressed.
Kiff compared The Sequence to a musical symphony, structured by interconnected themes and rhythms. It was a construct through which he could explore ways of thinking about reality and about how painting might express the paradoxical and arbitrary experiences of life. Working on an extended body of related images, he was able to follow ideas intuitively, developing the fusion of abstract and figurative imagery that would come to define his art.
The Sequence series explores collisions of fantasy with everyday, lived experience. Kiff drew from a wide variety of sources in order to bring what might be called a form of poetic primitivism to the work. The paintings motifs referenced stories from the myths and folktales of many different cultures and he used his own experience of psychoanalysis to explore multiple facets of the human psyche. The figurative elements of the images were fluidly combined with abstract forms and ways of using colour that were a response to ideas found in Modernism and Abstract Expressionism. It was an approach to painting that resulted in an utterly distinctive visual language, which brought Kiff to prominence during the 1980s 90s.
The exhibition features a number of important works that were included in Kiffs 1986 Serpentine Gallery solo exhibition. Amongst these are the first from the series, Something unknown has to be eaten or drunk (1971). The painting introduced ideas about a divided self and a sense of journeying into the imagination which were major themes throughout the series. Also featured are the early painting Echo and Narcissus, (c. 1973) a lyrical image which illustrates Kiffs use of classical subject matter. Later works, including Spitting Man (197680), The poet: Mayakovsky (1977) and Talking with a psychoanalyst: night sky (c. 197580) will reveal how the work extended into far more subjective and disturbing territory.
Also included in the exhibition are a number of previously unseen and unfinished paintings from late in the series which were found in Kiffs studio at his death. These have been hung in counterpoint to a triptych he began during his National Gallery Residency in 1991, to reveal how ideas explored in The Sequence related to his entire oeuvre. The triptych carries a great many references to the later Sequence paintings in its imagery of anthropomorphic landscape, a radiant female figure and a strange encounter that takes place between two gnarled figures in a black cave-like space.
Kiff was elected a Royal Academician in 1991, and from 1991 to 1993 worked as Associate Artist in Residence at the National Gallery. His work was exhibited internationally and was included in major public collections including Tate Britain; The British Museum, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; and MOMA, New York. Kiff was also acknowledged as a great teacher and worked for many years in the painting department at Chelsea School of Art and Royal College of Art, in additional to other British art schools. His approach to painting was enormously challenging to a dominant, critical hegemony that viewed painting primarily through the prism of theoretical standpoints, rather than as a form of affirmative visual poetics one made apparent through thoughts and objects engendered by the processes of painting itself.
Ken Kiff was born in Dagenham and trained at Hornsey School of Art (195561). He came to prominence in the 1980s thanks to the championship of art critic Norbert Lynton, and a cultural climate intent on re-assessing figurative art following the Royal Academys New Spirit in Painting exhibition in 1981. He started exhibiting at Nicola Jacobs Gallery, moved to Fischer Fine Art in 1987 and finally to the Marlborough Gallery in 1990, by which time he had begun exhibiting internationally and had work in major public collections. He was elected to the Royal Academy in 1991 and became Associate Artist at the National Gallery 1991-93. His 30-year teaching career at Chelsea School of Art and the Royal College influenced a generation of students.