Standing Figure, 1963 Oil on Canvas Titled & dated verso
Inscribed: No 250
Exhibited
Peter Kinley: Paintings &
Drawings, Osborne Samuel,
London, May - June 2006, ill.
p18 (7)
In this small oil on canvas of
1963 the central nude figure is
typically androgynous. The
influence of Matisse is
discernible and the expressive
power of colour within an
apparently simple,
symmetrical design would
seem to be Kinley’s
paramount concern. Islamic art
also influenced him as well as
Indian art although he did not
visit India until 1976. Nicolas
de Stael was a key influence
on Kinley, in the impasto
blocks of layered colour seen
in much of his work of the late
1950s and up until 1965. In the
early 1960s Kinley changed
from using a palette knife to
using a brush. During this
period his images became
simpler and flatter. Standing
Figure, 1963 may be thought
of as an example of an
intermediate period between
the thickly textured early work
applied with a palette knife and
the later work of the 70s and
subsequently, where
paint is applied much more
thinly. Kinley taught at St
Martin’s School of Art and
Wimbledon
School of Art. He became
principal lecturer at Bath
Academy of Art in 1975. He
exhibited widely in Britain,
New York and India. In 1982
he had a retrospective
exhibition at the Museum
of Modern Art, Oxford, and in
1986 a solo show at Kettle’s
Yard, Cambridge.
50.6 x 41 cms (19.89 x 16.11 in) P.O.A.
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