For the expatriate Australian
printmaker Hall Thorpe, (18741947), art and life were indissolubly
linked. And that link was the wholesome, positive outlook generated
by his belief in the values of Christian Science. Thus when Thorpe
stated that Pictures for our Homes should be wholesome
in subject, cheerful in colour, and decorative in design,
he was clearly advocating much more than aesthetics - he was
also endorsing his view of life itself.
Ultimately, though,
Thorpe was to become a martyr to these beliefs. In 1947, when
he refused medical intervention, his wholesome alternative beliefs
were not enough to save him from pneumonia. And, indeed, for
decades thereafter it seemed that nothing could save Thorpes
artistic reputation: his modest and gentle prints were viewed
as relics of 1920s conservatism. Then, just when it seemed that
the art worlds modern excesses had rendered him passé,
a resurrection was achieved.
In 1980 the (Sydney) Print Room
published Robert and Ingrid Holdens timely re-evaluation
and held a sell-out, retrospective exhibition. Once again, it
seemed that what was wholesome might be back in fashion!
One of the delights
in the intervening years since 1980 has been the occasional sighting
of a hitherto unrecorded Hall Thorpe print. Now, in 2008, the
first major exhibition in almost 30 years introduces a substantial
number of these lost works.
In a rare, autobiographical statement
published at the height of his international popularity, Hall
Thorpe reminisced about his early London experiences. I
went through my strange phases of Bohemia, he admitted,
and sampled the usual prevailing art crazes. But
then all this changed when he arrived at a more matured
understanding of
the mission of Art. For Thorpe,
then, art became Art with a capital A
and his lifes work became a mission.
Because Thorpe did
not edition his prints we will probably never know the full extent
of his industrious output. But one fact which might suggest how
committed he was to his personal aesthetic was recorded. When
Thorpe produced his Country Bunch it was not only his largest
print but also the one which enshrined his individual aesthetic
most completely. To produce it he laboured for one full year
over its fifteen blocks! It will always be seen, rightly, as
his masterpiece.
Today, it is left to us to wonder how
someone whose printmaking background in Australia had been limited
to topical news engravings and some few architectural etchings
could then, literally, blossom into the international artist
which Thorpe became. Into an artist who depicted a quintessential
English vision of a world of bucolic landscapes, of dawn on the
Thames and charming, dewy-fresh studies of simple English flowers.
This last subject
became Thorpes particular forte. His unpretentious posies
of popular cottage flowers mirrored his desire to create a democratic
art for the masses. And it is easy to see why those same masses
responded. One respected London critic in Thorpes day paid
homage to his consistent fight for the purity and beauty
of decoration. If these are qualities which are never passé,
then Thorpes work should be timeless.
This new exhibition
gives us another chance to appreciate the vision which lives
on in the art of Hall Thorpe.
ROBERT
HOLDEN
We
would like to thank the great nephew of Hall Thorpe, Ronald Ledgard
and his wife Glenda for their help in preparation of this catalogue.
June 2008