Garden of Ruins

09/11/2022 - 03/12/2022

Joshua Yeldham
Rain Owl

2022

ceramic

40.00 x 29.00 x 29.00 cm

Garden of Ruins

GARDEN OF RUINS

“From the root, the sap rises up into the artist, flows through him, flows to his eye. Overwhelmed and activated by the force of the current, he conveys his vision into his work. And yet, standing at his appointed place as the trunk of the tree, he does nothing other than gather and pass on what rises from the depths. He neither serves nor commands, he transmits. His position is humble. And the beauty of his crown is not his own; it has merely passed through him.” Paul Klee

One day there will be books written about art of the pandemic. They will note the surge of self-portraits. They will explore the impact of introspection, and perhaps they will also celebrate the flowering of a stubborn new breed of creativity. Persisting like a weed through a cracked pavement, the desire to find liberty inside suppression and

movement within stasis permeated the dawn of this decade. In that space, the still life and the interior have regained ground. The idea of “going within” is not new to Joshua Yeldham. His landscapes are as psychological as they are physical. His line goes off-road from figurative convention and his mediums bleed into each other, often within a single work paper, paint, wood and canvas will meet. But no matter how vast their scale, even his most ambitious triptychs and murals possess a containment. A frailty. Almost a secrecy.

Each major work grows over months. Some take years. In some ways this very gradual process forms an elaborate cocoon for the subject coiled inside the painting. Carved, glazed and sometimes studded with bamboo or shards of porcelain, Yeldham concedes that the depth of time invested in each work is akin to the pace of plant growth. Time is one of his most precious materials and he stretches it out to contain multitudes. From the seed of an idea sprout the facets of his own cosmology with animal totems, ritual colours, recurring symbols and a deep library of markings. Each work is an undertaking without a deadline, often embellished to the point of visual exhaustion. Like a network of nerves or thread roots, his tiny griffes form the invisible web that link impossible structures; The cobweb that holds up the mountain.



For Yeldham the variety of nature is his constant and his wellspring:

“If you take one window of nature and you look at the patterning from the veins in the leaf to the bark, to the fungus, the detail is boundless. When I paint, many of my works are highly intricate but they are just the truth of what is in a leaf or what is on a rock, there are so many striations in a single stone.”

Hive-like, the carved surfaces and pulsing texture in many of his best-known landscapes share a convex quality. Many of his pictures appear to breach their perimeter, pressing on to grow beyond the frame. This burgeoning micro- detail can beckon scrutiny or forge a barrier. Like Klimt’s forests, their dense skin can form a seal where the eye can go no further. The mutability of his materials form a critical aspect, because it’s hard to know what is wood, paper, canvas or bead when the force of line leads the eye. The image succeeds through convergence.

The desire to replicate the intense simultaneity of nature is a rare one. But the bounty of skill can also confine. The large paintings created during lockdown with his family swerve between the lyrical and the melancholy.

Morning Bay-Night Wave presents a mythical vegetable anatomy: part vine, part artery. The landscape that flanks The Great Burn Owl expresses its opulence and depth through rich colour. The rust of flames, the soot of ash, the quenching haze of indigo. Verging on the psychedelic, the painter admits that this concentrated time in his studio generated “epics”. Some were classical: the elegant balcony in View from the veranda - rain evokes Matisse in Cimiez. The core of its composition is an ethereal void. Was this a response to enclosure? Perhaps it is a natural evolution of his use of space. The compulsion to ‘complete’ an image by covering the entirety is receding.

Yeldham’s pace is ceaseless as the tide. Into the mix of a large collection are also ceramics, a new branch to his metier. To the heuristic mind there is no hierarchy of materials. The challenge and temptation to converge two and three dimensional objects into the same picture plane is an ongoing quest. The pottery studio beneath his house is now a fully-ledged atelier stacked with hybrid creatures. Nothing goes to waste; on some of the paintings ruined pots served as fresh grist, jutting from the canvas like fish scales.

Moving from paintings that evoke ancient Muromachi screens to gutsy three dimensional montages is a sweep. This wide collection of pieces, like all of Yeldham’s prolific output is not easily corralled. Yet something does thread the new work together: a shared sense of yearning. Many of his lock-down compositions depict views from windows, balconies and coastlines. Constructing sculpted paintings clad in panels of antique Japanese wood, wallpaper and ceramic frames, the artist took the idea of the interior further. Literally building the rooms he imagined beyond his own. The impact is one of ultimate enclosure.

“I built a world that I craved. Like a tendril I was seeking light. The strangler fig , the monsteria, both have the capability to adapt to any experience, and it is this innate intelligence that inspires me, their projection forward.”

In Yeldhams’ creative space there is a floor above the main studio he calls the “breathing room”. It is here that he takes works to rest in case they over-cook and it is here that he left many of his most existential paintings when he took his family to Europe. The release of the work he made there is stark and it formed the conceptual foundation of Garden of Ruins.

The journey began in Kythira in a house abandoned. Amongst the broken plaster and empty rooms where birds roosted, works on paper were made at speed. The ‘siesta studies’ as he calls them were his direct response to solitude. Yeldham was influenced by the rugged beauty of a patina centuries deep.

"I thought my creativity could make up for absence of humans in the ruins. To bring the human love back into the space. The forms I used came from a life of exploring polarities and all the symbolism that connects back into the natural and mythological world: the claw, the eye of the owl, sacred symmetry and recurring patterning. I drew on where I was and the reserves of my own imagery. My pictures are like ruins, they have their own codes and archaeology.”

The Mediterranean landscape, marked by thousands of years of invasion, drought and contagion served as an elliptical echo. Yeldham was influenced by the tenacity of nature in the face of destruction. A gnarled tree in the stone garden of the Greek house bore a kindred lineage to the massive Monsteria that anchors the core of his own home. It was connections such as this that propelled a strong sense of both union and release:

“Art can rebuild your sense of place when there has been isolation. A lot of this show is about reaching out. It’s like a message in a bottle. Sending a signal out that we exist. Each place we stayed became a studio and it was perpetual. The art leaves a pulse, an imprint, a thread.”

The desire to join with ancient spaces and new terrains built a bridge out of watercolour paper. The drawings are raw, abandoning his signature finesse for something wilder and more immediate. The ritual of painting protective symbols upon dwellings is something he explored; Pinning his private talismans to bare walls, ravaged stone and trees and ‘tattoing’ public spaces with digital projections, the idea of marking the space was a core ritual. Brought home after time in Italy, Southern Spain and France, these studies inspired a fresh collection of carved clay sculptures designed to hold candles like a votive altar. Gathered together on sunlit tables they share a collective solidity. Replete. Carved like his photographs and paintings, the platters and bowls balance utility with ornament. Yet for this particular artist there is no such thing as ornament, as each marking is so critical to the whole.

In constant motion, it’s tempting to see the accomplishment of a mature artist as a reflex. But instead of leaning into his deepest grooves, Joshua Yeldham plunges into new mediums and finds relevant ways for them to cross-pollinate. Garden of Ruins is not a retrospective but a survey. For although chronology is not that useful in understanding such a diverse trajectory, a timeline from 2020 to the present is meaningful to everyone. Life hung suspended and not everything generated within that time could compensate for the loss. These years form an arc that remains vulnerable and raw because it is unfinished.

In that closed window of time one studio was singing a redemption song. But even the most exquisite works in this exhibition share a subtle undertow of shadow and collective doubt. The agency of creating was one artist’s survival tool, a force of budding against decay.

ANNA JOHNSON



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