Bernard Cohen (British 1933-) §
Black Base, November 1958
£7,560
Auction: 28 October 2022 from 10:00 BST
Description
signed, titled and dated (to reverse), emulsion on board
Dimensions
122cm x 122cm (48in x 48in)
Provenance
Provenance:
Marden Hill House, Hertfordshire;
Rowntree Clark Gallery, Norfolk.
Footnote
Bernard Cohen, alongside his brother Harold (see lot 283), was part of an exciting generation of artists that emerged from London’s art schools in the late 1950s and early 1960s. Whether abstract (Cohen, Robyn Denny, Richard Smith) or loosely figurative (Hockney, R. B. Kitaj, Allen Jones) these original young British artists were linked by their love of all things American – seeing New York, not Paris (as previous generations had), as the centre of the art world. They had first seen the new American painting up close in 1956, when Abstract Expressionism formed a small but significant part of a Tate Gallery survey as part of 20th Century American art. Three years later, the Tate mounted another exhibition, although this time dominated by abstraction and the work of the New York School. This show, however, was less of a revelation for the likes of Cohen and more a confirmation, as in the intervening years – in works such as Blake Base – he had already created a language of gestural abstraction of his own. What they took, instead, was the ambition and scale of American painting – and in the 60s, Cohen’s work would become vast and more minimal, with Kasmin’s legendary gallery on Bond Street really the only place it could be shown.
In 1957 Cohen received a Boise Traveling Scholarship and, together with the French Government Scholarship awarded to him in 1954, he was able to travel and work in France, Spain and Italy. Here he would have come into contact with tachisme – the French version of abstract expressionism, where the brushstroke – or tache – had been liberated from describing anything but itself, or a sense of movement or emotion. However, with his eyes on America, Cohen gives the heavy existentialism of tachisme an open, upbeat twist. Despite its title, Black Base is all about colour, as well as the weight of the paint itself (as the elements seem to hang vertically off the backing). It is a painting perfectly aligned to Clement Greenberg’s dictats – a painting that has no reference outside its own making - and yet in its colour, its informality, it does capture something of what would become Pop, the Technicolor world of 60s London, as it emerges from the black and white of the 50s.