John Armstrong
17 7/8 x 26 in
Having spent the war years in Essex, by the end of 1945 Armstrong was installed in Oriental Cottage in Lamorna, Cornwall with his second wife, Veronica. An extraordinary place of exotic flora and fauna due to the balmy microclimate, Lamorna precipitated some of Armstrong’s most evocative, bold imagery of anthropomorphic organic forms, which live, grow and transform. As Herbert Read so famously argued, British surrealists made manifest a pre-existing ‘superreality’ in the British landscape. Individual artists were drawn to sites of psychic or mythological significance across the country: Paul Nash and Eileen Agar to the ancient rocks of Dorset, Graham Sutherland and John Piper to the Welsh landscape. Also resident in Lamorna was the deeply individual British surrealist Ithell Colquhuon, whose interests resided in the occult, myth and alchemical transformation. In her mystical tract on the region, Stones of Cornwall, Colquhuon details the giddy amalgamation in Lamorna of supernatural wildlife, Arthurian legend, provincial folklore, religious symbolism, Druidism, witch-covens and alchemical potential, all of which has its basis in the very “structure of its rocks [which] gives rise to the psychic life on the land”.
The statuesque figures that populated Armstrong’s 1945 Lefevre exhibition morphed over the subsequent two years into anthropomorphic forms of feathers, leaves, and shells. Still animated with classically monumental presence and contrapposto sinuous curving frames, it was evident that Armstrong was immersing himself yet further into symbolism and allegory. Originally titled Feathers, Feathers Conclave represents one of Armstrong’s earliest ambitious group compositions of an assemblage of erect feathers, gathered in a positive riot of exquisite pastel colours. In Stones of Cornwall, Colquhoun dedicated a chapter to describing the multitude of birds in Lamorna, claiming “the pink, russet, bronze-green and Sèvres-blue of a chaffinch is never so glossy as here”.
In light of Armstrong’s increasing political activism and vocal pacifism during the late-1940s – he designed the front-cover for the Labour party manifesto for their successful 1945 election campaign – Feathers Conclave takes on a subtly anti-war meaning. The feathers stand to attention, like a battalion of soldiers, but during both world wars feathers were handed to conscientious objectors to draw the attention of the general populace to their cowardice. The contrast between the soldier-like, even confrontational demeanour of these feathers and the reality of feathers’ lightness lends the painting a surreal humour characteristic of Armstrong’s anthropomorphic work. There is a certain theatricality to Feathers Conclave – the unit of feathers, dazzling, luminous and graceful, is staged for our delectation.
Provenance
Private Collection
Private Collection, UK
On long term loan to Pallant House Gallery, Chichester
Exhibitions
1947 London (probable), Lefevre Galery, New Paintings by John Armstrong (9)
2015, London, Piano Nobile, John Armstrong: Paintings 1938-1958; An Enchanted Distance, cat. no. 7, col. ill. p. 25.
Literature
A. Lambirth, A. Armstrong and J. Gibbs, John Armstrong: The Paintings, Catalogue Raisonne (London, 2009), cat. no. 330 (as Feathers), colour illustration, p. 188.