David
Saunders Paintings and Works on Paper 1974-2014
16 May - 5 July 2014 
Black Transformation [1973-74]. Household
emulsion and blackboard paint on canvas.
3 parts, 63.5 x 63.5 cm each
AAndrew Mummery is pleased to announce the opening of an exhibition
that brings together a selection of paintings and works on paper made
by David Saunders over a period of forty years.
David Saunders was a founder member in 1969, with Jeffrey Steele and
Malcolm Hughes, of the Systems Group. The artists in the Systems Group
shared an interest in logical and mathematical processes, a sharing
of information, the unity of ethics and aesthetics and logic, and
the rejection of individualistic expressionism. They made use of a
clearly defined vocabulary of elements, emphasising the materiality
andobjectivity of the work and the intelligibility and recoverability
of the process by which it is made. In 1972 an exhibition entitled
“Systems” opened at the Whitechapel Gallery in London
and toured public venues in the UK (1). The Systems Group
had strong links with international Consructivist and Concrete art,
and the work of its members was exhibited widely in the 1970s. The
predominance after 1981 - in the art market and in critical discourse
- of neo-figuration, sidelined much of the interest in this work,
but recent reassessment of the aims and achievements of British Systems
and Construction art (2) makes this exhibition of Saunders’
unfairly overlooked contribution to it, a timely one.
Saunders was a leading thinker within the Systems Group. His own work
is distinguished by a belief that we no longer see art as isolated
discrete objects, but as a field of overlapping and connected cyclic
processes, as forms oscillating between the determinate and the indeterminate,
and between the abstract and the real. He insists that complex mental
activity can be generated by a collection of signs even if the observer
is totally unaware of the ‘code’ according to which they
have been assembled. The ‘code’ should however, remain
rational and decipherable. The exhibition at Mummery + Schnelle will
reveal the consistency and rigour of approach of Saunders’ practice,
and his concern with establishing working structures and controlling
factors. He has always been emphatic in suggesting the possibility
of rigorous work that utilises indeterminacy rather than closed systems.
Saunders’ work has been strongly influenced by his interest
in, and exposure to, experimental music. While teaching at Portsmouth
Polytechnic in the late 1960s he came into contact with leading figures
of the English experimental school, including Cornelius Cardew, Michael
Parsons, Gavin Briars, Howard Skempton and John Tilbury. The Scratch
Orchestra, founded by Cardew, Parsons and Skempton in 1969, and the
Portsmouth Sinfonia, extended the idea of what kinds of sounds and
structures could be considered 'musical'. Saunders continues to collaborate
with Michael Parsons and has participated in performances of Cardew’s
The Great Learning. In the mid 1970s, having moved to Liverpool
Art College, he helped with the setting up of influential Liverpool
art rock/new wave band Deaf School. Saunders does not attempt to make
any literal connection between the musical and the painterly, but
believes that the relational systems of music and painting can be
usefully compared.
The earliest work on show, the three-part Black Transformation
from 1973/74 is based on the prime numbers as ratios. Saunders became
interested in prime numbers in the early 1970s because they provided
him with a system of proportions that was, paradoxically, both law-governed
and unpredictable. In his works from the 70s, Saunders was involved
with geometrical transformations, utilising differences in scale and
rotation principles. 
601-3 (No.1), 1979-80. Acrylic on
canvas. 90 x 179.5 cm
The back gallery space at Mummery + Schnelle will be dedicated to
the exhibition of an important suite of three paintings from 1979
that Saunders sees as summing up his work up until that point. In
them three simple ideas, linear, tonal and chromatic, are meshed to
elicit a rather complex, unexpected and temporal effect. The geometry
of the works consists of three kinds of division - the vertical, and
two obliques in opposition. Four geometrical figures are produced
by the interwoven sequences of colours and tones: rectangles, right-angled
triangles, parallelograms and isosceles triangles. There are four
colours: blue, yellow, grey and black; three tones: dark, middle and
light; and one constant, black. The effect of the variations of these
elements in the three paintings seems to Saunders to be somewhat akin
to that experienced through the ‘pulses’ and ‘phases’
in the music of Steve Reich. 
901-2, 1985. Acrylic on canvas. 95
x 95 cm.
In the 1980s Saunders carried out a number of experiments with colour
theory in collaboration with fellow artist Jean Spencer. In his works
from this period Saunders adhered to a series rules: that there are
four primary colours - red, blue, green and yellow; that all colours
occupy equal areas of the canvas; that all colours have the same density
and the same edge quality, and that all colours are of equal importance
regardless of hue, saturation or tone value. The colours in these
paintings can be described as light, very light, dark and very dark,
but the register of the ensemble can be raised or lowered and the
set of colour values can be contracted or stretched. In this exhibition
the painting 901-2, one of a pair from 1985, has the four
primary colours, in a somewhat darkened register. The particular geometry
of this painting
provides for every colour to have a common boundary with every other.
For Saunders, a particular quality of an individual colour is that
it is not really “seen” until it is compared with other
colours and identified in relation to them. There is affinity here
with French philosopher Jean-Francois Lyotard’s idea that a
use of colour gives rise to an aesthetic of material presence. The
ideas expressed in 901-2 developed, in the late 1980s and
early 1990s into a group of polyptychs consisting of monochromatic
and dichromatic panels. 
Untitled (05 October), 2005. Ink
on paper. 38 x 56 cm.
After 2002, geometry began to be replaced in Saunders’ work
with procedures more intertwined with the nature of painting itself,
including explicitly gestural activity involving modifications, disturbances
and changes of tension and energy. A key event in this development
was Saunders’ visit in 2002 to the exhibition “The Art
of Calligraphy in Modern China” held at the British Museum.
Another major influence on the thinking behind the work that he started
to make at this time was his long-standing interest and involvement
in experimental music, especially that of Cornelius Cardew. (It is
worth noting that Cardew's major experimental work The Great Learning
is rooted in ancient Chinese philosophy)
Saunders now begins by making 'brushes' from all kinds of material
– anything in fact that can be used to transfer ink and paint
from a container onto the supports he makes from birch ply coated
in a traditional gesso sottile made from Champagne chalk and rabbit
glue. Following the Chinese method Saunders gives importance to variations
of gravity, pressure, velocity, fluidity and distancing - the level
of contact with the support. The performative and behavioural conditions
of making and perceiving become an integral part of the process. All
of this is, from Saunders’ point of view,
systematic, although in a different way from his earlier geometric
constructivism. Complex forms begin to evolve from the calligraphic
process employed and the material discovered in the drawing suggests
the placing, extension and modulation
of the colour that Saunders then introduces and which often obliterates
much of the calligraphy. 
Untitled (April-May 2013), 2013.
Acrylic and ink on gessoed plywood panel. 75 x 65 cm.
In his most recent works Saunders addresses the question of time in
relation to painting, and articulates sensations of time and duration.
In a painting there is no ‘before’ and ‘after’:
all the elements are simultaneously present. Time is nevertheless
implicit in the spatial organisation. Similarities and differences
are grasped sequentially, but the arrow of time can point in any direction.
In relation to music, it might even be said that his recent paintings
and drawings create a ‘timbral space’.
There is a tension in them between indeterminacy and organisation.
Saunders initiates a cross-fertilisation between feeling, experiencing
and “reading” a painting.
David Saunders was born in England in 1936. He studied painting at
Saint Martin’s School of Art and at the Royal Academy Schools
in London. His first solo exhibition was at the Artists International
Gallery in London in 1965. Saunders taught at Portsmouth Polytechnic
from 1968 to 1971, and later at Liverpool Polytechnic Art School until
1988. In 2006 he moved to the French Pyrenees where he continues to
live and work. His work is included in a number of public collections
including Tate Gallery, London; Southampton City Art Gallery; Victoria
and Albert Museum, London; Arts Council of England; Arts Council of
Wales; The British Library, London; University of Sussex; Dean Clough
Collection, Halifax; Gemeentemuseum, The Hague; Meermanno Museum,
The Hague; Forum Konkrete Kunst, Erfurt; Stamford University, USA.
(1) Alongside that of Saunders,
Steele and Hughes, this exhibition featured the work of Richard Allen,
John Ernest, Colin Jones, Michael Kidner, Peter Lowe, James Moyes,
Geoffrey Smedley, Jean Spencer and Gillian Wise.
(2) Construction Britain, Tate Britain [2010], A Rational Aesthetic
– The Systems Group and Associated Artists, Southampton City
At Gallery [2008]. A suite of three paintings by Saunders from 1974
recently entered the collection of the Tate Gallery.
For further information, please contact Mummery + Schnelle on:
+44 (0)20 7729 9707 or at: info@mummeryschnelle.com
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