
Nigel Cooke, Gazing (2019). Oil and acrylic on linen. 224.9 x 164 cm. Exhibition view: Nigel Cooke: New Paintings, Pace Gallery, New York (31 January–29 February 2020). Courtesy © Nigel Cooke and Pace Gallery.
Over the years, Cooke’s lines have become more diffuse, and his human and animal figures have become increasingly fused with brightly coloured abstract backgrounds. At Pace Gallery’s 540 West 25th Street space in New York, the recently closed exhibition, New Paintings (31 January–29 February 2020), demonstrated how Cooke has moved away from figuration to embrace the abstract entirely. Bodies are gone, leaving behind only washes of colours and swirling masses of lines laid energetically on raw linen canvasses.
“In almost all of the works, strokes of white seem to have been applied on the top-most layers of colour, highlighting the lines so that they seem to be composed of neon—the effect is such that they seem alive.
Pines (2019), for example, consists of rich, bright green lines dense with clumps of shiny oil painted over deep, dark clouds of gray and brown wash. The painting recalls a sylvan landscape in a windstorm, a nightmare, or the course of many seasons, growing dense. Bather (2019) is a whir of cerulean, cobalt, black, and flecks of white that conjures less the act of bathing than the aesthetic ideal of what water can look like. Love (2019) is pink and black, laid upon washes of yellow; brushstrokes cluster towards the top of the canvas while the bottom has a paucity of lines, suggesting an absence, or, if one wants to be maudlin, a heartbreak. In almost all of the works, strokes of white seem to have been applied on the top-most layers of colour, highlighting the lines so that they seem to be composed of neon—the effect is such that they seem alive.
Cooke began each painting with a single colour drawn in a loose structure, on top of which he applied lines in loose, gestural, dynamic strokes, much like a calligrapher applies lines to the page. Cooke, who used to work in such fine detail that he had to wear surgical glasses to complete his paintings, confesses that this ‘feeling of being in a performative arena with the painting’ felt strange to him at first, ‘but as time went on it became intoxicating, addictive’. Soon, he realised that this was his ‘natural temperament as a painter’—‘to work with and against failure and success in one unbroken gesture brought out deeper ideas and incidents in the process.’
But despite their abstraction, it is clear that these paintings represent something. In Sunlight (2019), frantic spirals and curves of neon yellow paint steer clear of two humps towards the bottom of the canvas. The works are immediately redolent of abstract expressionists such as Willem de Kooning and Clyfford Still, and their titles offer an entry point into understanding what Cooke might be trying to represent. Athlete (2019) glistens with oily slicks of red and black—a head and two flung arms are discernable in the coiling mass of gestures.
Cooke says that the paintings in his New York show were inspired by his year-long residency in the city, where he had never lived before, despite showing in galleries here for 17 years. ‘Having this chance at this point must have connected to that early sense of adventure and possibility, and as I was looking to let some new sort of energy into my work’, he told Ocula; ‘it meant I was maybe more tuned-in and open-minded than I might have been at other times.’
In the end, the artist proves that the conversation about where painting can go as a medium has certainly not died. ‘What happened’, he says of the process this exhibition represents, ‘was a recalibration of what a painting is, what an image is, what abstraction is.’ —[O]
A respected voice in contemporary art discourse.
Focusing on ambitious storytelling and insightful art-world commentary. Ocula Magazine publishes in-depth interviews, critical essays and timely analysis on the artists, exhibitions and ideas driving the global art world.
Learn more about Ocula Magazine
Showcasing the best of the art world.
Ocula partners with galleries from around the world to highlight their artists, artworks and exhibitions. Gallery membership is by application and invitation, with each member vetted by an independent panel.
Learn more about Ocula Membership
Specialises in the sale of major artworks.
Led by a team with deep ties to the world’s leading auction houses, galleries and collectors. Ocula’s advisory team offers bespoke services to high-net-worth clients from around the world who are looking to acquire the best of contemporary and modern art.
Learn more about our team and services