Michael Smither’s “Here & Now” paintings convey mood and spirituality

New Zealand Arts Review article by John Daly-Peoples

For sixty years Michael Smither has painted his immediate environment – his family, the objects he was surrounded by and the landscapes he inhabited.

While his early landscapes are crisp with light colour and detail he has progressively abstracted the colours and shape he finds in these landscapes and his latest exhibition sees him further creating simplified expressionist approach.

Where his early works  had an emphasis  on surface and light his later works and particularly the works in his latest exhibition “Here & Now” are focussed on light and colour. These colours are connections to some of his previous works  where music and colour have harmonic relationships.

These expressionist landscapes convey  mood and spirituality, echoing the desire of artists from medieval times to convey ideas through the wonder of intense colours as was seen in the stained glass of churches – an interest also seen in Colin McCahon’s ecclesiastical projects with James Hackshaw.

“Here & Now” can be seen as a reference to and a recreation of the landscape images which were produced on Cooks first voyage to New Zealand. The reference to those often stacked profile drawings of the coastline can be seen in the large “Coromandel Peninsula Quintet” which as well as depicting the changing landscape forms also capture the changing moods of the area.

In this series of works Smither has created landscapes that are part representation and part dreamscapes  where the interplay of bold light and intense colour  convey the aura or mana of the landforms, sea and sky.

 

Link to the full article - 

https://nzartsreview.org/2021/11/29/michaek-smithers-here-now-paintings-convey-mood-and-spirituality/

29 November 2021