Norman Dilworth | |
---|---|
Born | |
Died | |
Education | Slade School of Fine Art |
Occupation(s) | Artist, Teacher |
Movement | Kinetic, Constructivist |
Spouse(s) | Mary Webber (1958), Christine Cadin (1982) |
Children | 5 |
Norman Dilworth (1931-2023) was an English artist, born in Wigan, Lancashire. His work is systematic, constructivist and concrete. It is mainly exhibited and appreciated in continental Europe, where it is held in many national collections. [1] [2]
Norman Dilworth was born on 12 January 1931 in Wigan, Lancashire, where he attended Wigan Art School from 1949 to 1952. [3] From 1952 to 1956 he studied at the Slade School of Fine Art, where he won the Tonks Prize in 1955. The following year he was awarded the Drawing Prize by the Sunday Times [3] and a French Government scholarship to study in Paris from 1956 to 1957, [3] where he befriended Alberto Giacometti. His work at this time took the form of paintings and drawings in black and white, using geometric forms that played with the viewer's perception. [1]
During the fifties, Dilworth was an important figure in contemporary art, exhibiting in the Young Contemporaries Exhibitions in 1953, 1954 and 1955 and the John Moores Exhibition in 1959. Dilworth's work became associated with Kinetic art and in 1966 he took part in an exhibition alongside Bridget Riley and Michael Kidner at the Herbert Art Gallery, Coventry. [1]
Since the 1960s, Dilworth had lived in England, teaching in several colleges. In 1971 the British Arts Council awarded him first prize for his sculpture entitled Haverfordwest. Later that year he decided to move to Amsterdam after a successful solo exhibition in The Hague. By now, his work had moved from Kinetic to Constructivist art. [1]
In 1973, Dilworth took part in 4 English Systematic Artists, the second group exhibition of the Systems Group. Although he chose not to become a member of the group, his work has a strong affinity with the group. In 1974 he won first prize for Fountain for Cardiff [3] by the Welsh Arts Council. [1]
In 1980, Dilworth assisted Gerhard von Graevenitz in curating the exhibition Pier+Ocean, in which Dilworth's own work was included together with other Constructionist and Systems Group artists. This "ambitious and, as it turned out, controversial" [4] group exhibition explored the relationship between Constructivist art and Land Art, Arte Povera, Minimalism and Conceptualism. [3] [1]
When Dilworth moved to Lille in France from Amsterdam in 2002, the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam staged a farewell exhibition.
Dilworth's first retrospective in France took place between 8 July and 30 September 2007 at the Museé Matisse in Le Cateau-Cambrésis. [3]
Before 1982, Dilworth lived in London. After 1982 he lived in Amsterdam, moving to Lille in 2002. [3]
Dilworth was married in 1958 to Mary Webber. The marriage was dissolved in 1976. He remarried in 1982 to Christine Cadin. Dilworth died in Lille on 25 January 2023, leaving two daughters and a son from the first marriage, and two sons from the second. [4]
The commune of Paris-Plage, which hosted the works of Dilworth, paid homage to him by laying a plaque, with the artist's signature and handprints, on the ground of the Garden of Arts.
Christiaan Karel Appel was a Dutch painter, sculptor, and poet. He started painting at the age of fourteen and studied at the Rijksakademie in Amsterdam in the 1940s. He was one of the founders of the avant-garde movement CoBrA in 1948. He was also an avid sculptor and has had works featured in MoMA and other museums worldwide.
Jacqueline de Jong is a Dutch painter, sculptor and graphic artist.
James Lee Byars was an American conceptual artist and performance artist specializing in installations and sculptures, as well as a self-considered mystic. He was best known for his use of personal esoteric motifs, and his creative persona that has been described as 'half dandified trickster and half minimalist seer'.
Auguste Herbin was a French painter of modern art. He is best known for his Cubist and abstract paintings consisting of colorful geometric figures. He co-founded the groups Abstraction-Création and Salon des Réalités Nouvelles which promoted non-figurative abstract art.
Raoul De Keyser was a Belgian painter who lived and worked in Deinze, Belgium.
Pierre Bismuth is a French artist and filmmaker based in Brussels. His practice can be placed in the tradition of conceptual art and appropriation art. His work uses a variety of media and materials, including painting, sculpture, collage, video, architecture, performance, music, and film. He is best known for being among the authors of the story for Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind (2004), for which he won the Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay alongside Michel Gondry and Charlie Kaufman. Bismuth made his directorial debut with the 2016 feature film Where is Rocky II?.
Lothar Hempel is a German artist based in Berlin. He attended Kunstakademie Düsseldorf from 1987 to 1992.
Bramvan Velde was a Dutch painter known for an intensely colored and geometric semi-representational painting style related to Tachisme, and Lyrical Abstraction. He is often seen as member of the School of Paris but his work resides somewhere between expressionism and surrealism, and evolved in the 1960s into an expressive abstract art. His paintings from the 1950s are similar to the contemporary work of Matisse, Picasso and the abstract expressionist Adolph Gottlieb. He was championed by a number of French-speaking writers, including Samuel Beckett and the poet André du Bouchet.
Geneviève Claisse was a French geometrical abstract painter.
Janise Yntema is an American painter working in the ancient wax encaustic technique. Yntema was born in New Jersey and attended Parsons School of Design and the Art Students League of New York. She has had solo exhibitions in New York and throughout the United States as well as London, Amsterdam and Brussels. Her works are in the collections of several museums in Europe and the United States, including the Museum of Modern Art and Metropolitan Museum of Art.
Alain Godon is a French painter and sculptor.
Thomas William (Thom) Puckey is a British sculptor living in Amsterdam and Tuscany. He was awarded a master's degree in 1975 at the Royal College of Art, after studying fine art at Croydon College of Art. He moved to the Netherlands in 1979.
Desiree Dolron is a Dutch visual artist who lives and works in Amsterdam, the Netherlands. Her photographs portray a variety of styles and subjects, including documentary photography, still life, portraits and video works. Dolron is best known for her series Xteriors (2001-2018).
Yang Yongliang is a Chinese contemporary artist.
Koen van den Broek is a Belgian artist who lives and works in Antwerp and Seoul, South Korea.
Albert Jean Gorin was a French neoplastic painter and constructive sculptor. He was a disciple of Piet Mondrian, and remained true to the concept of rigid geometricism and use of primary colors, but pushed the limits of neoplasticism by introducing circles and diagonals. He was known for his three-dimensional reliefs.
Berend Strik is a Dutch visual artist working and living in Amsterdam.
Johannes Jacobus (Jan) van der Vaart was an influential Dutch ceramicist from the 20th century, known as founder of the abstract-geometric ceramics in the Netherlands.
Aslan Goisum is a Russian contemporary artist based in Grozny.
David Saunders is an English artist, teacher, and musician. His work is systematic and constructivist. It is mainly exhibited and appreciated in Europe, where it is held in many national collections.