Wednesday 7 September 2011

Eileen Mayo & Linoland


To read what some curators and auction houses say about Eileen Mayo (1906 - 1994) in the Antipodes, you would think she was some kind of multinational. But all the linocuts here (except for the last one) date from the time she spent in Britain before she left in 1953. Isabel de B Lockyer dated all of hers and most of these are dateable, too. To me, this suggests something interesting about the attitude of these artists to their linocuts - that it is art and not craft. Following on from Claude Flight, they make claims for a medium often seen as suitable for children. (Franz Cizek (1865 - 1946) at the School of Arts and Crafts in Vienna had pioneered its use for children and in 1925 Alan Seaby had this to say about his work  'it has been found that a child... can deal with linoleum with ease'). And, of course, Turkish Bath (1927ish) wilfully contradicts all this professorial wisdom. Its steamy abandon is hardly general viewing.


Morning tea, with its sexual ambiguity, is even less so. Here is an artist who had trained with a modern vengeance at a series of London art schools: the Slade, the Central School, Chelsea Polytechnic. But it all went out the window with her very first print. She famously got on the phone to Claude Flight for instruction in linocut. The sumptuous art deco of Turkish Bath was the lurid result. It's outrageous, of course, and a lark. And it also got her included in the 'The first exhibition of British Linocut' that Flight organised in 1929. (I am going by Osborne Samuel's date for this - it seems to waver). She was a true printmaker at that point; an artist who was using print to try out new ideas. By Morning tea her lifelong use of bold colour and repetitive, sinuous line is already well to the fore.


She was an admirer of Eric Gill's work but in those first two prints she come across as far more fresh and contemporary than Gill ever did (and I admire his work, too). If Black Swan sees her moving towards an interest in natural history, Cats in the trees displays the same wit and decorative elan we saw in her figure subjects. The skill of her work is beyond doubt. She was highly trained. The growing formalism of her work during the thirties is fairly typical of the times, which were less than easy. She perhaps wasn't going to make a living out of jazz-age linocuts but personally I would have liked to see more.


These two next prints, with their flat figures, simplified colours and sense of recording popular life, would not be out of place in a King Penguin book about British folk art. The Doric Dairy cart is quite some way from the sensuousness of the turkish baths, or waking up. There we had what I find very attractive, a woman artist taking women as her subject - not women in a domestic setting but in pleasurable ones. With ice-cream vendors and milk carts, we move back to a simplified world of linocut childhood. They certainly look like illustrations rather than manifestos.


But this is not a linocut artist, not like, say, Sybil Andrews or Claude Flight. All I have done is look at one aspect of Mayo's work that I like and that starts off very early in her career. She made wood-engravings, lithographs, screen prints, too, sometimes of the same image but never with quite the same sense of verve that she achieved early on.


But everything still went into the mix. This later linocut, which she made in Australia, has elements of both surrealism and abstraction. It's a glorious thing but you can see the teacher in her. In that resepect she is like Bormann and Klemm and Orlik, exemplary in what she does but somehow there is still something missing. I think you can tell by now which of these works I prefer.

14 comments:

  1. Not on topic, I know, but having moaned on and on about how linocuts make so much more money than wood engravings, there are some Buckland Wright pieces coming up at Bloomsbury Auctions at the end of this month and they are mostly listed with a 700-900 estimate. Hardly Sybil Andrews money, but not nothing either.

    High enough for me not to be able to afford them, anyway. Why was I complaining about low prices, again?

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  2. Anthony, you can never tell. It's still quite alot because JBW isn't to everyone's taste. But thanks for the tip.

    HB

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  3. I like her a lot. Have you notived she sticked to editions of 30 al her life? Nr.1 my favourite. I like her later Australian work too. Maybe because linocutting was a school and educational activity so many individual and, most important, creative and unique artists sprang up later from that pool. It has long since been bannend from school programs. Too dangerous for little children's fingers (and liability). Nowadays the computer is considered superior teaching and developping children's creative skills..........Much safer it is. Franz Cizek deserves and should have a statue.

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  4. Hmm, I was too fast, editionsizewize. Looking closer I've seen 12 and 50 too.

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  5. I don't think editions meant very much at that time. Strict editions strike me as a publication/sales device for bigger prints like lithographs later on. The discussion about Ian Fleming's editions (the post last month) make interesting reading if you haven't seen it.

    Nr 1 is my favourite as well even though it is cruder than some of her later work. I would like to know the story behind it - if there is one.

    I'm not so sure about your Cizek statue. You are having a Czech time of it right now, after all. I really need to accustom myself to Linoland before I say much more.

    Charles

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  6. She was also a good friend of Laura and Harold Knight, who gave her an important entree to London art, as well as her connection to the Bloomsbury set and Flight himself. She certainly travelled in the right circles of interwar London. Although I love Turkish Bath, I find her works not always universally pleasing. Turkish Bath was a quick sale to the V&A, and hers was one of the first linocuts by a British woman to be purchased by the V&A....although it may have had something to do with the relationship that Redfern galleries had with the V&A at that time. I find her works though to be aesthetically stunning and then at times, naive and unappealing.

    Her later works though, I love. They are bold, modern and have visual impact and although I am a big fan of the aesthetics of the 20's and 30's, her works don't move me in the same way as I. de B Lockyer. Mayo's works from the forties and fifties are the works I like the most. She took a different approach, and her works were more blocked out and there was an attention to line.

    She isn't recognized enough in my opinion, so this blog entry does something to right this wrong.

    Clive

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  7. She may not be that well known in the UK but she did receive a knighthood, which is significant recognition. Her linocuts certainly seem to command high prices in Australia, which is another form of recognition again.

    But this post was only a smallish window on one aspect of her work, a personal choice. It's always the problem with concentrating on prints when artists have worked in a variety of mediums. Fortunately, there is alot of material, both images and biography, from Wikipedia and galleries so that let me off taking the exhaustive, Ethel Kirkpatrick approach to Mayo. And as you rightly say, her work doesn't always appeal sufficiently to move me to multiple posts.

    There has been more interest in this post than in the one on Lockyer, which surprised me. But there you are.

    Charles

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  8. Yes, well I think Dame Eileen was far more famous in her lifetime than Isabel....this usually augers well for prices and future details. Eileen Mayo also has relatives that are still very much involved in maintianing the memory of their much celebrated family member. Isabel and Eileen are waiting for their books, any plans for the next seven years Charles?
    Clive

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  9. I was going to leave linocut to you, Clive, now that you are semi-retired. Incidentally, I learned only this week that someone at the University of Wales, Aberystwyth, is writing a book about Sidney Lee. I couldn't imagine anything worse.

    'British Printmakers' gauged Isabel de B Lockyer's popularity at the time by the number of prints that were still around.

    Mayo's London milieu sounds custom-made for a Michael Holyroyd bio. I think those early prints are full of tempting ambiguities.

    Charles

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  10. i'm so glad you've decided to linger in this charming era. they absolutely delight me.

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  11. And there is more to come, Lily.

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  12. an Eileen Mayo Water color has shown up in South Carolina of a Yellow Billed Cuckoo. Its really interesting to see these pieces showing up where they are...

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  13. its at a Auction with a gallery called Charlton Hall in Columbia.

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  14. Eileen Mayo also designed stamps for New Zealand and Australia. And I "think" she was the first woman to design stamps for Australia (1959-61). Through collecting stamps I have become fascinated with Mayo's artwork and often search for information and examples on the net. Thankyou for this blog post. It is a very interesting article and I enjoyed reading your views and seeing the examples of her lino prints. The Swan lino print above is my favourite, reminds me of her nature book illustrations and stamp designs.

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