Press Release

Offer Waterman and the Estate of William Turnbull are delighted to announce a major retrospective exhibition at No.9 Cork Street in London from 29 June to 20 July 2022, to celebrate the centenary of the artist’s birth.

William Turnbull (1922–2012) was one of Britain’s most important post-war Modernists. Described by Nicholas Serota when Director of the Tate as ‘an exceptional artist, unusually gifted both as a painter and a sculptor’, he explored the changing contemporary world and its ancient past, actively engaging with the shifting concerns of British, European and American artists.

Offer Waterman has exclusively represented the artist’s Estate since 2015 and this is the most comprehensive exhibition of Turnbull’s work since a major retrospective at the Tate Gallery in 1973. Staged across six rooms and two floors of the Frieze space at No.9 Cork Street, the exhibition brings together more than 60 paintings and sculptures from every period of the artist’s career as well as a small number of works on paper from the late 1940s. The majority of the works come directly from the estate, complemented by major loans from private collections to ensure a comprehensive presentation of the artist’s inventive brilliance and mastery of different mediums.

This retrospective begins in 1949, a year after Turnbull left London and the Slade to relocate to the more artistically experimental and exciting environment of Paris, where he made contact with some of the giants of modernism, including Brancusi and Giacometti. At this time Turnbull was ‘fascinated with things moving and touching and perceptually convinced of energy as creation’. Initially he created kinetic sculptures, before producing static works that suggested the potential for movement, with the assertion that ‘ultimate movement is ultimate rest’. Three sculptures, Forms on a Base, Maquette for Large Sculpture and Torque Upwards, all dating from 1949, epitomise this notion, their spindly forms rising in different directions from rectangular bases. The plaster versions of these bronzes were exhibited at the Hanover Gallery, London in 1960, and the original presentation of the plasters, on sculpture stands, has been recreated at No.9 Cork Street.

In the next room, Turnbull’s archetypal ‘totem’ sculptures stand alongside abstract ‘river’ paintings’ such as 24-1963, which were inspired by the artist seeing aerial views of the jungle when a pilot in the First World War. Combining bronze and various woods and stones, the stacked sculptures exhibit wonderful contrasting colours and surface textures. Some of these works, such as Agamemnon, 1962, Oedipus 3, 1962 and J_anus 1_, 1959, bear mythological titles that imbue them with ancient associations. A group of Turnbull’s monumental, vibrant colour-field paintings will be showcased alongside a number of his large, raw and sprayed colour steel sculptures. These potent and experimental works, a marked departure for the artist, were in part informed by a trip to New York in 1957 during which Turnbull met Barnett Newman and Mark Rothko.

The exhibition introduces some of the most important themes of Turnbull’s career: the horse, the female figure and the human head. Five of the artist’s radically different approaches to the horse as subject are presented together dating from 1946 right through to 2000 and ranging from the textured, angular planes of Turnbull’s upright, monolithic Pegasus, 1954, to the pared back linear form of Horse 3, 2000. Another room is dedicated solely to Turnbull’s various early interpretations of the human head motif, including a series of seven masks that the artist made in 1953, which in his own words ‘attempt to fix that which is most continuously fleeting and mobile–the expression on a face’. Designed to be mounted on the wall, these masks demonstrate the introduction of figuration into Turnbull’s work. The head also appears in numerous paintings from the 1950s, three examples of which are on show, including a large 60-inch-high canvas entitled Calligraphic Head, composed of expressive and gestural mark making and paint splatters. Referring to such works, Turnbull commented that he had not wanted ‘to transpose the head from three dimensional reality to a flat surface–but to imagine what a head would be if flat (squeezed between two pieces of glass like a micro-slide) and made of paint marks’.

The exhibition also unites seven standing female figures from the 1950s and the 1980s. While earlier sculptures such as War Goddess, 1956, are blocky, abstracted and geometric in appearance, later works such as Paddle Venus 2, 1986, have simple silhouettes, a thin profile and a clear front and back aspect. Seeing these works side by side, one notices unique decorative surface elements of each bronze, such as puncture holes and fine incised lines, but also the close attention the artist gave to the patination of his individual casts.

Further informationOffer Waterman will host a launch event for the Lund Humphries publication William Turnbull: International Modern Artist on 28 June 2022 at No.9 Cork Street. Produced in association with the Turnbull Studio, this book will be the most comprehensive publication on the artist to date.

The exhibition will also be accompanied by a fully illustrated digital catalogue, which will include archival imagery and installation photographs of each room in the show. A printed version of this catalogue will be released in October 2022.

On Saturdays at 12pm and 3pm, the basement of No.9 Cork Street will host screenings of Beyond Time, a film about William Turnbull, produced by the artist’s son, Alex Turnbull, and Pete Stern and narrated by Jude Law.

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About the Artist

William Turnbull’s work resonates across cultural, geographical and historical divides and evades neat classification. His work would be equally at home in a museum of ancient artefacts as in a museum of contemporary art. [...] While habitually linked with the ‘Geometry of Fear’ – a group of British sculptors...who rose to international prominence in the 1950s in the wake of Henry Moore and Barbara Hepworth – his work has a seriousness of purpose and depth of thought that marks it apart. He connects with just about every art group of the period, but at the same time was allied to none. This independent streak is a key characteristic of his life and work.

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About the Gallery
Offer Waterman opened his first gallery in Chelsea, London in 1996. Now based in a five-storey Georgian townhouse in Mayfair, the gallery has developed an international following for its exceptional 20th Century and Contemporary art. Previously the historic William Morris & Co showroom, the gallery at 17 St. George Street provides a relaxed and understated exhibition space across three floors, with a library and research centre on the fifth.

The gallery’s experienced and approachable team are dedicated to helping collectors, at all levels, develop remarkable and individual art collections. Offer Waterman is known for its historical exhibitions including, Frank Auerbach, Early Works (2012), David Hockney, Early Drawings (2015), Robert Rauschenberg: Transfer Drawings from the 1960s and 1970s (2016) and William Turnbull, Centenary Exhibition (2022). In 2023 we collaborated with fashion designer Jonathan Anderson on the exhibition On Foot, which placed 20th century British art in dialogue with Anderson’s own designs and works by contemporary artists and makers. Most recently, in the autumn of 2024, Frank Auerbach: Portraits of London, produced in collaboration with Francis Outred, presented 25 major landscapes from private and museum collections and attracted more than 5,000 visitors.

Offer Waterman is an established benefactor of museums and arts organisations and the gallery has supported numerous museum exhibitions including the Tate’s most recent David Hockney retrospective (2017); the Royal Academy of Arts exhibitions Lucian Freud: The Self-portraits (2019) and David Hockney: The Arrival of Spring, Normandy, (2020) and Barbara Hepworth: Art and Life at the Hepworth Wakefield (2021-22). In 2023, the gallery sponsored exhibitions by two leading female artists - the beautifully curated Lucie Rie: The Adventure of Pottery at Kettle’s Yard, Cambridge and the equally compelling Gwen John: Art and Life in Paris and London at Pallant House Gallery, Chichester.
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Address
Cork Street

9 Cork Street
London
W1

(1)
London 17 St George Street
Offer Waterman
17 St George Street, London, United Kingdom
+44 (0)20 7042 3233
https://www.waterman.co.uk/

Opening hours
Tuesday – Friday, 11am–5pm
Saturday 11am–4pm

The show will be closed for the holidays on Good Friday and Easter Saturday.
The art world in focus