Press Release

Hauser & Wirth Somerset is pleased to present an exhibition of new paintings by London and Somerset based artist Catherine Goodman. Goodman was artist-in-residence at Hauser & Wirth Somerset from January to May 2018 and many of the works in the exhibition were made during her residency. Her practice includes expressionistic landscapes, vigorous sketches, experimental collages and portraits; central to her process is the act of drawing from observation, whether from life, objects or the great masters and their works. She has travelled extensively, working for many years in India and the Mediterranean landscape.

The exhibition is titled Eve and the majority of works are vibrant, colourful, landscape based paintings occupying the Threshing Barn, Workshop and Pigsty galleries. Goodman describes her residency in Somerset as ‘a quiet, contemplative setting where the idea for this garden grew.’ Although not explicitly representing the ‘Garden of Eden’, these energetic paintings incorporate rich, rural habitats, often with female figures or children merging into the landscape. All of the artist’s paintings begin with drawing from life, which is fundamental to her practice. Whilst on the residency in Bruton, Somerset, Goodman set up and took part in regular life drawing sessions. It was from these sessions that the figure of Eve emerged and subsequently features in several of her paintings. In these works, the artist is investigating an arrival of consciousness, referencing the story of Eve in Genesis. She is exploring the point at which we become aware of shame and lose our childhood naivety, just as Eve becomes aware of her own nakedness. These paintings investigate moral and existential questions elicited by the shaming and blaming of Eve, and the relevance of these ancient archetypes in today’s society.

Eve (2018) depicts the anguished figure of a woman hunched over, her body intersecting and merging with the trees. Goodman is interested in how an intervention in the landscape–in this case the figure–alters our perception of it. In this series she is exploring the poses of these ambiguous figures and their relationship to the natural architecture of the scene. In other paintings the temporary structure of the hammock–a motif the artist has often returned to–is the tool for shifting our impression of the landscape. In Kiss (2018) heavy textural paint and expressive brush strokes combine with splashes of virulent red. A shroud- like hammock is slung between two dark foreboding trees, the coiled rope left to hang in a noose, adding to the painting’s sinister quality. In contrast Departed Presence (2018) portrays a brightly striped hammock, swinging invitingly between two sunlit trees.

In Tiger Girl (2018) an angelic child dressed in a tiger costume sits in the foreground, a look of relaxed concentration on her face. Behind her a tree is illuminated with a flame-like quality that lends an air of mystery to the work. The freedom and energy of the mark making alludes to movement and transformation. Goodman is fascinated by masks and the notion of children dressing up, playing with the image they inhabit. In We Fight for Paradise (2018) the viewer is confronted with a child wearing a grinning blue mask, bearing a bow and arrow against a luscious Mediterranean backdrop. The verdant landscape mirrors the fertile imagination of the child, as yet unsullied by worldly concerns.

The children in the paintings are Goodman’s nieces, with whom she is very close, drawing them regularly. Of her nieces she comments: ‘They are at that stage where they are completely free, but I question what will happen when they come into this world full of social and political challenges?’ Goodman sees her artistic practice as a conduit for understanding where she stands on a subject. She quotes E.M. Forster: ‘How do I know what I think until I see what I say’ and likens this to her own experience that ‘You can have a position and a stance intellectually, but it’s when you’re making images that you actually know what you think about something.’

Goodman’s expressionistic landscapes are predominantly from drawings made in India or Italy–both places the artist has revisited time and again throughout her career. She tends to return to settings that are well known to her, she likens these vistas to homes, saying ‘they have a huge bank and resonance of memory’. Nevertheless these works are not intended to be descriptive paintings about particular places; rather they represent a garden in the artist’s imaginative life.

Watching and drawing from film is another ongoing part of Goodman’s practice, which she describes as ‘feeding off another’s eye’. Beekeeper (2018) depicts a scene from the 1973 film ‘The Spirit of the Beehive’ directed by Víctor Erice. The painting, in which a central figure tends a beehive, has a compelling, haunting quality with the face of the figure concealed behind a hood-like mask, eerily reminiscent of a klansman.

Goodman describes her drawings from film as ‘quotations’. A series of flags hanging outside the gallery and visible through the windows of the Threshing Barn depict further ‘quotations’ from film. The flags, although much larger in scale, conjure images of the Buddhist prayer flags that the artist has encountered many times on her travels. Goodman acknowledges a certain poetry in the notion of her works beginning as drawings in the landscape, diverging into paintings, and then returning into the landscape as flags.

About the Artist

Catherine Goodman (b. London 1961) is an artist based in London and Somerset. Goodman trained at London’s Camberwell School of Arts & Crafts, and the Royal Academy Schools, at which she won the Royal Academy Gold Medal in 1987. Since leaving the Royal Academy, she has worked as an artist at her studios in London and India. Goodman has had numerous solo exhibitions, including Portraits from Life at the National Portrait Gallery in 2014. She won First Prize in the BP Portrait Award in 2002.

Her visual language runs across genres, acknowledging the influence of literature, film, music, drawing from art and life, enriching her work. Goodman has developed her own subtle mythology, the motifs of which carry through her drawings and paintings, whether of real or imagined landscapes and characters, or impressions conjured from memory.

She has a longstanding interest in artists’ development and education, as well as the importance of drawing to artistic practice. To address the increasing absence of observational drawing programmes in art education, in 2000, Goodman co-founded the Royal Drawing School with HRH The Prince of Wales in Shoreditch, London.

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About the Artist

Catherine Goodman (b. London 1961) is an artist based in London and Somerset. Goodman trained at London’s Camberwell School of Arts & Crafts, and the Royal Academy Schools, at which she won the Royal Academy Gold Medal in 1987. Since leaving the Royal Academy, Goodman has worked at her studios in London and India and has had numerous solo exhibitions, including Portraits from Life at the National Portrait Gallery in 2014. She won First Prize in the BP Portrait Award in 2002.

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Also Exhibiting at Hauser & Wirth

About the Gallery

Hauser & Wirth was founded in 1992 in Zurich by Iwan Wirth, Manuela Wirth and Ursula Hauser, who were joined in 2000 by Partner and Vice President Marc Payot. A family business with a global outlook, Hauser & Wirth has expanded over the past 26 years to include outposts in Hong Kong, London, New York, Los Angeles, Somerset and Gstaad. The gallery represents over 70 artists and estates who have been instrumental in shaping its identity over the past quarter century, and who are the inspiration for Hauser & Wirth’s diverse range of activities that engage with art, education, conservation and sustainability.

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Somerset Durslade Farm, Dropping Lane, Bruton
Hauser & Wirth
Durslade Farm, Dropping Lane, Bruton, Somerset, United Kingdom
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Opening hours
Monday – Thursday, Saturday – Sunday, 10am - 5pm
Friday, 10am – 7pm
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