HASTINGS.- John Bratby was a prolific painter, writer and enfant terrible of the British art scene during the 1950s and 60s. He died in his adopted home town of Hastings in 1992 whilst walking home from his local chippy the day after his 64th birthday.
Rather than create a traditional retrospective of his oeuvre it is believed Bratby painted over 3,000 works
Jerwood Gallery, in collaboration with Bratbys family, friends and colleagues, launched a rare opportunity for the UK public to shape the content of a major gallery exhibition. It called for submissions of privately owned Bratbys, along with personal recollections, letters and photos. The response was staggering.
Hundreds of people (including many household names) got in touch with their remarkable and often totally unknown until now Bratby works and stories. The works uncovered are astonishing and reveal the incredible passion of his collectors.
An independent panel of Bratbys dealer Julian Hartnoll (also owner of the Bratby archive), Bratbys friend and assistant Charlie Reeves, Exhibition Curator Victoria Howarth, artist Tom Hammick and Mark Ellin from Burstow & Hewett Auctioneers & Valuers, had the unenviable job of whittling down the submissions. They formed a shortlist of portraits, landscapes, still lives and drawings from across the UK that will feature in John Bratby: Everything but the Kitchen Sink, including the Kitchen Sink. The exhibition will take up the entire ground floor of Jerwood Gallery.
Bratby painted a whole raft of celebrities and notable figures during his life. Included in the exhibition will be a portrait of Sir Paul McCartney, painted in 1967 at the height of the Beatles fame. The Monty Python star Michael Palin - who wrote about the experience of sitting for Bratby in his book Halfway to Hollywood - Diaries 1980-88 - is lending his 1981 portrait. The star of Jurassic Park and The Great Escape is captured in Lord and Lady Richard Attenborough (1967). Seen in public for the first time will be Bratbys portrait of actor Tom Bell (painted in 1979 when he was starring in Bent, lent by Toms partner Frances Tempest), agony aunt Claire Rayner (1981, lent by her son the journalist and food critic Jay Rayner), author Sir Malcolm Bradbury (1982, lent by his son Dominic), and the comedian Arthur Askey (1967),
We will also get to meet Bratby himself as the exhibition features several self-portraits - including Self Portrait with David and Friend (1965) and Self Portrait with a Sunflower (1977) from the collection of Bratbys widow Patti, who is lending a number of her paintings to the show. Patti herself is featured in many works (such as Patti Seated, 1978) as is the artists first wife, Jean (Jean Tired, 1955). Bratbys son David is lending the beautiful 1959 charcoal drawing David Bratby as a child his father did of him. Another portrait of David is being lent by Room with a View actor Julian Sands, who has a considerable Bratby collection and is lending five works to the exhibition, including a spectacular Nude - apparently a favourite work of late artist Lucian Freud. We even get to meet the family pets, such as Angora Rabbit (1983), owned by Patti Bratby.
Bratby admired Van Gogh and repeatedly produced paintings featuring sunflowers and we will see a number in the show, including Sunflower Pool II (1959) and Sunflowers 11 (1967), plus other still lives (such as Still Life with Oranges, 19). Bratbys impasto brushwork also captured memorable landscapes, represented in the show by works inspired by his trips to Venice.
Due to the overwhelming amount of previously unseen archive material offered to Jerwood Gallery, one room of the exhibition will be a recreation of Bratbys domestic environment.
Patti Bratby, Johns widow, says "I'm so excited about this project and the final exhibition - I can't stop thinking about it. John worked with great intensity - from one seed out of a packet of the Van Gogh variety, John did 55 sunflower paintings in 18 days. I cannot wait to see so many of his works collected together in Hastings."
Jerwood Gallery Director Liz Gilmore says A retrospective of John Bratbys work is long overdue, and where better for it to take place than in the town that he made his home. John Bratby was a complex and intense personality, but I hope the show captures some of his moments of genius. We hope our exhibition will rediscover and celebrate the man who put everything but the kitchen sink, including the kitchen sink, into his art.