 |
SW
Magazine
Wall to wall art |
|
The home and gallery, once part of a Catholic convent,
is shared by Cynthia, her husband and their 13-year-old
daughter (when home from boarding school Bedales) plus
a fluffy grey cat called Prinnie (short for Princepessa).
The high ceilings and walls serve well as a gallery
except that here, surrounded by family accoutrements,
it feels less intimidating than the traditional kind
and for art buyers, it is easier to imagine the paintings
on your own walls.
The story begins in 1986, when Cynthia (originally from
Boston) left her home in the States where she worked
as a city banker in Manhattan. Having accepted an offer
of a transfer with the same company over in London,
she packed her bags and headed across the Atlantic.
"Then I met my English husband over here and stayed:
boom!" says Cynthia, as we sit talking over freshly
brewed coffee, in a bright yellow painted room lined
with an eclectic array of art. Cynthia speaks with passion
about her story and all that is close to her heart.
She is vivacious and energetic, a do-er and an achiever.
|
|
So,
having met her husband, she continued to work on and
offí as a banker until 1997, (having her daughter
in between). "I could tell you my whole on and
off story over another coffee meeting,î she adds
laughing. "I decided I wanted to pursue the other
things in my life -music and art." And so she enrolled
at Christies to study art history for two years, specialising
in modern art. But before anyone could accuse her of
chasing a whim, Cynthia pulled together her first "home"
exhibition in June 1999, before she had completed the
course."I couldn't afford to rent a gallery, so
a colleague at Christieís said, "why not
have it athome?" So I did, and managed to make
a small profit," she says, making it sound far
too simple.
At that time, Cynthia showed paintings from her own
collection including works by artists she had discovered
over the years. Ghislaine Howard, for example, is married
to a lecturer at Christies.
While looking around the lounge with its bay windows
that open onto beautifully kept grounds and a large
terrace, I come across one of Ghislaine's powerful paintings
from a series entitled Stations of the Cross. Called
Prisoner, it shows the image of a man viewed from behind,
his arms tied at his back, awaiting his fate. Itís
clear to see why Amnesty International was keen to acquire
the painting, which now sits awaiting their collection.
Christies, again, provided Cynthia with another artist,
Colin Wiggins. A lecturer there and head of the art-in-residence
programme at the National Gallery, he mostly paints
strong, female nudes. ìI try only to show art
that Iím happy to have on my walls. I'm driven
by passion," says Cynthia. I notice there are a
number of paintings by artist Andrew Burgess, whose
work reveals much about his love of travel and of heights.
Cityscapes are a strong theme, with towering skyscrapers
and views of the States, London, and other European
cities. Interestingly, his painted world is devoid of
people, creating a stillness that possesses none of
the usual chaos associated with cities. Author Kazuo
Ishiguro is one of Andrewís biggest collectors.
Other artists Cynthia represents include the well-known
American artist Robert
Shaft, who lives in Amsterdam with his Dutch wife; the
French artist Couloumy
(praised as a modern day Vermeer) and the Italian artist
Marco Crivelli.
"It's very hard to juggle both. The art side is
probably harder though, as thereís so much administration
and the business side takes over the passion. I have
to do it all on my own ñ collecting paintings
from abroad, hanging them and so on. There's no one
to ask, "can you go and do that please?" she
says. But clearly she manages it all well - and with
a range of bright plans for the gallery, plus a new
CD out shortly, the staff quota looks about to change
any time soon.
The Cynthia Corbett Gallery is showing at artLONDON,
22-26 May, Duke of York's HQ, Chelsea.
For further information on the gallery or Cynthiaís
jazz performances, she can be
contacted on: 07939 085 076 or by email: corbettcc@hotmail.com |
November
9,2001 Antiques and The Arts Weekly
Yankee Returns Home (For A
Visit)
WIMBLEDON, ENGLAND
The Cynthia Corbett Gallery of Wimbledon England will
soon be making its first appearance at a U.S. art
fair in the home town of its owner - Boston. American
Cynthia Valianri Corbett established her gallery in
England in 1999. Corbett, originally from the Boston
area, is a graduate of the University of Massachusetts,
Amherst and the Flercher School of Law and Diplomacy.
She relocated to London from New York City in 1986
and pursued a career in investment banking. In 1996,
Corbett enrolled in a course at Christies in London
in order to fulfill a longstanding passion to study
art history and opened her art gallery before the
ink could dry on her diploma.
The gallery is operated from Corbett's Victorian home,
which at one time served as a Catholic convent. With
high ceilings, huge windows and massive rooms, it
is an ideal place to showcase her growing stable of
British and European-based artists.
"By showing art in a domestic setting, prospective
buyers can envision the works in their own homes,"
said Corbett. "Sometimes people, especially new
or young art collectors, can get intimidated in a
gallery setting. In my home environment, filled with
all the clutter of family life, visitors relax —
this is very conducive for art appreciation."
Several of the artists who Corbett represents and
promotes in London will be making their Boston debut
at stand number eight at the Fifth Annual Boston International
Fine Art Show being held at the Cyclorama, Boston
Center for the Arts from November 15 to 18. These
artists include the London based Anglo-Jewish artist
Andrew Burgess; printmaker and draughtsman Colin Wiggins,
who is also in charge of the art-in-residence program
at London's National Gallery; Anglo-Irish painter
Ghislaine Howard, who lives in the Derbyshire Peak
District; and the American Robert Shaft, who has been
living in Amsterdam with his Dutch wife for the last
ten years.
Andrew Burgess's work is fueled by his fascination
with travel and heights. He paints cityscapes of,
among other cities, New York, San Francisco, Pittsburgh,
Boston, London, Sienna and Prague. Corbett comments,
'Andrew loves American cities, skyscrapers, 1940s
film nolr, Pop Art and Hopperesque images. All of
these influence his work and combine with his enthusiasm
for climbingtowers and tall buildings. When you view
his work you realize that he has no problems with
vertigo!"
As Burgess himself says, "I go up high to get
away from people. I need to be removed from the hyperactivity
of the city. And I don't want the paintings to be
picturesque scenes of everyday life, people shopping,
sitting in cafes. I want something different."
The painting of "Downtown Boston" illustrates
the artists view of the world - it's alive with color
and urban chaos just minus the people. The artist
never paints people.
By contrast, Colin Wiggins almost exclusively draws
people of the female variety and calls all of his
works portraits — such as his nude portraits
of French dancer "Elise Dujon after Ingres."
He loves the female form and his work draws upon his
daily environment - London's National Gallery where
he has been surrounded by the Old Masters for 20 years.
Even when Wiggins depicts ancient Irish tombs he sees
the female form.
"Their soft, feminine forms gently allude to
the human body at rest, poetic proof that those who
built them and laid their dead to rest in them, understood
the world as the Mother Earth to whom we all return,"
said Wiggins.
Painter Ghislaine Howard, British-born but with Irish
parents, has been greatly influenced by a combination
other Irish-Catholic heritage and years studying art
in Paris. Howard, who is currendy the BBC artist-in
-residence, is best known for her ground-breaking
exhibition concerning pregnancy and birth at Manchester
City Art Gallery and for her recent Amnesty International-sponsored
monumental series "Stations of the Cross,"
which was shown at the two Liverpool Cathedrals in
2000 and at Canterbury Cathedral and in London's Mayfair
in 2001.
The series was critically acclaimed, as Zariah Shreef
ofThe Big Issue (a London magazine operated and run
by and for homeless people) wrote in her review of
the exhibition, "Ghislaine Howard is well on
her way to becoming one of the great humanist artists
of our time."
Howard's painting of "Grieving Woman" is
a poignant visual expression of grief and although
painted as one of the "witness" figures
for the "Stations" series, it is a powerful
albeit tragic reminder that the modern world has not
been able to eradicate senseless violence.
Although Robert Shaft is a very serious painter, in
marked contrast to the themes of Ghislaine Howard,
Shaft's work is about fantasy and whimsy. Shaft commented,
"I frequently hear the word cheerful when people
view my work. I don't plan it that way, but I like
it. I strive to achieve the effect of perfect silence
I experience when I look at the work of the Great
Masters — it's almost musical."
Born and raised in Michigan, having studied and worked
in New York, Shaft is very much from the American
tradition of Pop Art tinged with fantasy and Surrealism
but always with a touch of the classical. His application
of paint, use of light and color, and the finish surface
of his paintings owe a great debt to Seventeenth Century
Dutch Old Masters, all hardly surprising since he
is married to the prominent Dutch decorative artist
Sylvia Goetheer and has adopted Amsterdam as home.
His "Teacups" seem to float in midair, a
Pop Art version of Dutch still life. He has also recently
completed a series of "Whimseys" which he
will be showing at the Boston Fair.
Cynthia Valianti Corbett is looking forward to introducing
these and other British and European artists to Boston.
In London, many other clients are Americans who love
the contemporary feel mixed with the traditional artistic
qualities of the work she so enthusiastically promotes.
Corbett may be "coming home" to Boston but
she is certainly bringing a lot of fresh, new artistic
friends with her. |
| |
|
Monday January 13, 2003,
The Guardian
Gallery
chief put in the picture after framing top artists
Maev Kennedy,
arts and heritage correspondent
Sir Peter Blake looks like Santa Claus, Paula Rego
looks ferocious and Frank Auerbach looks surprisingly
amiable and domesticated. Colin Wiggins, the man on
the easel or within the picture frame in the images,
looks nervous, as well he might.
A unique set of portraits of eminent contemporary
artists will go on display for the first time next
week, at the London Art Fair.
Each is a portrait by Wiggins, deputy head of education
at the National Gallery, of one of his heroes in art
but in each case he gave th! e etching plates to his
subjects and invited them to complete the picture
by adding their own portraits of him.
The artists are all friends, and all agreed, instantly,
even the notoriously secretive and reclusive Frank
Auerbach: Sir Peter said they all liked the idea that
they would get a set of portraits of their mates as
part of the deal. Tortuous negotiations are now under
way to swap etching plates between London and Los
Angeles for the next in the series, the pop artist
RB Kitaj.
Sir Peter, who has been knighted at the age of 70,
has also just been appointed Professor of Drawing
at the Royal Academy schools. The first group of students
visited his studios just before Christmas.
|

Two of the National Gallery's
double portraits |
"I told them the one piece of advice I could give
was to draw everything, all the time, and to date all
their drawings. But you couldn't count on students today
having the materials, so I made them all party bags.
They each got a drawing pad, a pencil, a sharpener,
and a rubber; and I put in a tangerine and a chocola!
te pencil as well. People are just getting interested
in drawing again; a few years ago it would all have
been computers, but now they're just beginning to find
them boring."
He became friends with Colin Wiggins over his mandatory
mid-morning cup of tea, while he was artist in residence
at the National Gallery. He said he was instantly intrigued
by the portraits idea. "Frank's very good, Paula
can look very fierce, but it's all an act. She's really
a very gentle person. He's got me very nicely; it looks
just like me. I'm not quite finished with him though,
I need to do a bit more work, I'll have to get the plate
back after the exhibition," Sir Peter said.
The idea sprang from an etching Mr Wiggins made of Jackson
Pollock, incorporating his interpretation of a Pollock
paint dribble painting. "It took much longer than
the portrait of Pollock himself - I thought what a pity
he isn't still alive, then I could have got him to do
the Pollock bit."
The trickiest collaboration was with Frank Auer! bach.
The painter is a legendarily obsessive perfectionist,
often painting in marathon all-night sessions, then
scraping off his work until only a ghostly image remains
on the canvas, and starting all over again. Paintings
take years to complete. The same technique could not
be applied to a copper etching plate, but it was still
not an entirely straightforward process. After Auerbach's
customary stack of discarded drawings, he drew the Wiggins
portrait straight onto the plate.
"He wasn't quite happy with the first image, so
I burnished it away for him, just leaving the faintest
outline as he asked. Then he made a second plate, and
I printed the final image from both plates. He might
have a reputation as a bit of a recluse, but he was
very easy, very jolly to work with."
Pricing the double portraits could be slightly tricky.
Paula Rego's eerie canvasses, drawing on images from
folklore and fairy tales, are clamoured over by collectors.
Peter Blake is regarded as the father of! British pop
art, and immortal for his 1967 cover for the Beatles'
Sergeant Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band. An etching
by Frank Auerbach, one of the most distinguished painters
working in Britain, would cost thousands; an etching
by Colin Wiggins slightly less.
They will be on offer from gallery owner Cynthia Corbett,
for £600, £650 framed. All the artists have
waived their royalties and are contributing them to
Smart, a charity for homeless and socially alienated
artists, which is based at the National Gallery's neighbour,
the church of St Martin's in the Fields.
London Art Fair, Business Design Centre, London, January
15-19 |
|
|
|