The Artist Life -Peter Ireland
Text by Jill Trevelyan
Who would be an artist? New paintings by Peter Ireland
For Gisborne artist Peter Ireland, the New Zealand expatriate painter Frances Hodgkins is an inspiration. ‘She was a tough old bird’, he says, ‘and I admire hugely her focus, commitment and tenacity.’
Hodgkins was nearly 60 when she gained recognition in England in the late 1920s, and she painted some of her most celebrated works in the last decade of her life. Always open to experiment, she has been an exemplar for New Zealand artists for more than a century.
When Peter Ireland read a book of Hodgkins’ letters in 2017, he had an idea for a new series of paintings, linking her art and her letters. Those eighteen works are now on display in ‘The Artist Life’, an exhibition at Napier’s Rabbit Room at 29a Hastings Street.
Sampler X (ruins), shows Ireland’s method. Taking a Hodgkins painting from the collection of Te Papa, he selects a detail, transposes it to a circular format, and superimposes a short text from one of Hodgkins’ letters. ‘I always have to wear a hairshirt – & I am inured to economy’, it reads. The text seems to float against the image, flickering in and out of view, inviting us to look closely to puzzle it out.
Ireland has often drawn on historical images in the past, toying with ideas of originality and appropriation in his art. Here, Hodgkins provides a departure point, an invitation to experiment with new imagery and colour harmonies, while exercising his wit and imagination. These are playful, inventive works: as Ireland says, ‘In filmic terms, Hodgkins is the producer but I’m the director!’
It’s no accident that the texts in the paintings recall the cross-stitch of embroidery. Ireland has a longstanding fascination with the traditional sampler, a piece of embroidery or cross-stitching produced as a demonstration of skill in needlework. ‘They’re beautiful and often touching objects’, he says.
Ireland has used this distinctive cross-stitch device in his paintings since the 1990s, in an ongoing series of ‘Sampler’ paintings. Compared to those earlier works, which addressed attitudes to the land, and were often provocative and ironic, his new Frances Hodgkins Samplers are quiet and intimate in tone. We could be overhearing a conversation – two painters swopping stories across time, ruminating on their lot.
Ireland has selected quotations from Hodgkins’ letters that reflect on the challenges of the artist’s life, hence the title of the exhibition. ‘I could do with less admiration and more sales’, reads one. ‘Think well before you embark on an art career’ is another.
The exhibition is full of such rueful reflections, but the overwhelming impression is the inherent joy in painting – in being alone in the studio, immersed in the mysteries of line, form and colour. Peter Ireland’s radiant and engaging paintings are a fitting tribute to the courage and commitment of Frances Hodgkins.
Peter Ireland on Frances Hodgkins RNZ interview with Lynn Freeman, click on link below to hear interview
https://www.rnz.co.nz/audio/player?audio_id=2018798638
The Gisborne Herald July 03, https://www.gisborneherald.co.nz/entertainment/20210701/the-artist-life/
Peter Ireland’s Frances Hodgkins Samplers C A T A L O G U E With associated texts and references
1 Sampler X (ruins): “I always have to wear a hairshirt - & I am inured to economy”, letter to Rachel Hodgkins, 3 December 1923, oil on canvas, (372)
SOLD
2 Sampler VIII (church): “I come in faith, why is the way ahead so black?”, letter to Eardley Knollys, 1 October 1946, oil on canvas, (568)
SOLD
3 Sampler V (barnyard): “Art is like that – it absorbs your whole life & being”, letter to Rachel Hodgkins, 5 October 1924, oil on canvas, (383)
SOLD
4 Sampler XV (eggs & willow): “I could do with less admiration & more sales”, letter to Rachel Hodkgins, 30 January 1919, oil on canvas, (339)
SOLD
5 Sampler XVI (castle): “One has to put ironbands around the heart & not show one’s feelings”, letter to Isabel Field, 23 October 1917, oil on canvas, (327)
SOLD
6 Sampler XII (basilica): “Inspiration is not a faculty to be tapped at will”, letter to Dorothy Selby, 25 June 1931, oil on canvas, (441)
SOLD
7 Sampler IV (hyacinths): “Mon Dieu, why do we do it?”, letter to Rachel Hodgkins, 22 December 1910, oil on canvas, (257)
SOLD
8 Sampler XIV (subway): “Think well before you embark on an art career”, letter to Hannah Ritchie & Jane Saunders, 20 December 1923, oil on paper, (373)
SOLD
9 Sampler II (desire): “Vouloir c’est pouvoir”, the inscription on a French biscuit, a favourite of the artist’s, translating as “To wish is to be able”, oil on canvas
SOLD
10 Sampler IX (brown vase): “life is full of knocks & blows”, letter to Rachel Hodgkins, 5 December 1907, oil on paper, (220)
SOLD
11 Sampler III (vessels): “Perhaps my day will come – I wonder”, to Rachel Hodgkins, 22 February 1917, oil on canvas, (319)
SOLD
12 Sampler XI (Purbeck): “Security is the root of success”, letter to Willie Hodgkins, 25 September 1924, oil on paper, (381)
SOLD
13 Sampler XVIII (aurum lilies): “Sympathy can be both whip and spur”, letter to Duncan Macdonald, 10 July 1934, oil on canvas, (462)
SOLD
14 Sampler VI (white vase): “I like to think my spring has not flowered without anybody seeing it”, letter to Myfanwy Evans, 15 May 1940, oil on canvas, (504)
SOLD
15 Sampler VII (mug & two jugs): “I may yet come into my kingdom if I can only hang on”, letter to Rachel Hodgkins, 12 August 1908, oil on canvas, (234)
SOLD
16 Sampler XIII (urn): “But au fond – deep in my work – I am steadfast & steady as a rock”, letter to Lucy Wertheim, 13 February 1928, oil on canvas (406)
SOLD
17 Sampler XX (leaves): upper “I get desperately tired & used up at times”; lower “but the excitement of it all keeps me going”, letter to Rachel Hodgkins, 24 July 1909, oil on paper,
SOLD
18 Sampler IXX (bowl & jug): upper “But don’t mind the buffets & knocks”; lower “they are inseparable from the artist’s life”, letter to Edith Collier, 18 February 1921, oil on pape
SOLD