Tony Phillips (painter) explained
Tony Phillips (born 1952)[1] is a British artist and printmaker.
Early life and education
Phillips was born in Liverpool in 1952 to parents who came from the Caribbean. He studied Mural Design at art college in Preston, graduating in 1972. In 1978 he moved to near Shrewsbury, Shropshire and has subsequently moved to Italy.[2]
Paintings
Phillips' style is figurative and explores history, the built environment and peoples' ways of life. He has used a number of media including oils, pastels and etchings.
His work is held by UK galleries including the University of Liverpool, Wolverhampton Art Gallery, Abbot Hall Art Gallery and Shire Hall Gallery as well as the collections of the Victoria and Albert Museum and the Art Council.[3] He has also exhibited internationally.
History of the Benin Bronzes (mid 1980s) are among his best known works. They are a series of nine pastel drawings inspired by the British Punitive Expedition to Benin in 1897.[4] The drawings place the bronzes within their social and cultural context. They illustrate twelve events in the capture of the bronzes and their subsequent removal to western museums (such as the British Museum) and show the tension between views of a culture and its artefacts.
Liverpool (1995) is an oil painting where the composition is full of history and socioeconomic themes. The central image is of a massive carved stone lion towering over a child to represent the power of the British empire over its subjects. This is surrounded by depictions of houses and buildings of Liverpool in various states of repair indicating both history and future. The lower third of the painting shows a section of the Liverpool docks walls, source of the city's wealth but also of suffering by slaves, dock workers, emigrants and immigrants.
Liverpool – Growth of a City (2003) is one of his series of etchings using a single plate that is re-worked to produce a series of different images, which is printed as an edition at each stage. The later prints show some of the layers from the earlier versions that can be considered faint, ghostly background. This series of prints shows a back alley in Liverpool 8 and how it changes from the 1890s to the 1980s. The city develops in the background as the ally itself becomes increasingly derelict.
Exhibitions
- Phillips has exhibited a number of times at the Bluecoat Chambers: the group exhibition Black Art: Plotting the Course (1989), the etching series, Jazz in 1993 and a solo show The City (1994).[5]
- In 1991 he was among the seven painters curated by Eddie Chambers in the History and Identity - Seven Painters exhibition at the Norwich Gallery, Norfolk Institute of Art and Design.[6]
- In 1991 his work was included in the Shocks to the System national touring exhibition curated by the UK Arts Council.[7]
- In 1997 his work was shown in the Transforming the Crown: African, Asian and Caribbean Artists in Britain 1966 - 1996 exhibition at the Caribbean Cultural Center, New York.[8]
- A retrospective of his work from the 1970s onwards was shown in 2006 within the Liverpool Biennial of contemporary art. The works were placed within exhibition space in Senate House at the University of Liverpool.
- The Victoria Gallery and Museum, Liverpool showed Shrine to the 20th century in 2013 that was produced during his 'Man, Machine and the 20th Century' residency.[9]
- The Victoria and Albert museum exhibition in 2013 In Black and White: Prints from Africa and the Diaspora included some of his prints from their collection.[10]
- In 2016 his work was shown in Artist and Empire at Tate Britain, London.
Notes and References
- Web site: 2020-10-13. X. The Gallery. 13 October 2020. V and A Collections.
- Web site: Tony Phillips . Diaspora-artists . 13 October 2020.
- Web site: Tony Phillips b.1952 . ArtUK . 13 October 2020.
- Web site: Draper . Amanda . Liverpool by Tony Phillips . Victoria Gallery & Museum . 30 October 2020.
- Web site: Tony Phillips '12 Decades' . The Bluecoat Chambers . 13 October 2020.
- Book: History and Identity - Seven Painters . 1991 . Norwich Gallery, Norfolk Institute of Art and Design .
- Book: Ascherson . Neal. Johnstone . Isobel. Shocks to the System . 1991 . Arts Council Collection . 1-85332-070-6.
- Book: Beauchamp-Byrd . Mora . Transforming the Crown: African, Asian and Caribbean Artists in Britain 1966 - 1996. . 1997 . 09654082-0-5 . 13 October 2020.
- Web site: Shrine to the 20th century exhibition at Liverpool's Victoria Museum . Liverpool Echo . 13 October 2020.
- Book: In Black and White: Prints from Africa and the Diaspora . 2013 . V&A . 9781-85177-754-9 .