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George Claessen, A Presence, 1969 © The Estate of George Claessen Courtesy Three Highgate
Sri Lanka-born George Claessen’s retrospective exhibition ‘Babel to Abstraction’ will be held in London beginning 20 October.
The three-months long exhibition will be held at Three Highgate, 3 Highgate High Street, N6 5JR. Opening times are Thursday to Saturday from 2.00 p.m. to 6.00 p.m. and on Sundays from 12.00 p.m. to 4.00 p.m. All other days by appointment, by prior contact to Irina Johnstone [email protected] +44 203 795 7200
Three Highgate is an art gallery and creative hub based in Highgate Village, an iconic part of London, perched at the top of Highgate Hill and teeming with history and culture. The gallery is run by the owner and Director, Irina Johnstone, and places special emphasis on development and promotion of both emerging and established artists with a unique and poetic vision.
Whilst George Claessen is popular among art enthusiasts and collectors in Sri Lanka and his exhibitions are a sell-out, he is relatively unknown in the West and rest of the world. With the growing interest in South Asian Art in the West there is a revival of interest in Claessen, particularly his abstract expressionist work. It is argued that he may be the first Asian abstract expressionist painter. Dr Shamil Wanigaratne’s monograph: “George Claessen, Artist, Sculptor and Poet 1909-1999”, published by Paradise Isle, is currently the main source of information about this genius.
In addition to the retrospective of Claessen’s work, Three Highgate Editions, the publishing arm of the gallery, will release a new collection of his poetry to coincide with the exhibition. Entitled ‘Collected Poems of a Painter’, it features 86 of George Claessen’s poems and a foreword by Alistair Hicks. It will be available to purchase from Shearsman, priced £12.95. (ttps://www.shearsman.com/store/George-Claessen-Collected-Poems-of-a-Painter-p586407841)
Three Highgate and George Claessen’s Estate have also partnered with Emmy/Sundance award-winning Documentary Film Director Rob Lemkin, to produce a documentary film delving into his life and artistry. The film is scheduled to premiere in November 2023 to tie in with the exhibition run at Three Highgate. More information can be found at www.threehighgate.com.
’George Claessen: Babel to Abstraction’ has been curated by Alistair Hicks, an independent curator and writer and former Senior Curator at Deutsche Bank, in collaboration with the Founder and Director of Three Highgate Irina Johnstone. Alistair Hicks has recently curated Paula Rego shows at the Kestner Gesellschaft in Hannover, and the Pera Museum in Istanbul. He is the author of Global Art Compass; Urban Mirrors; New British Art in the Saatchi Gallery; and The School of London.
The George Claessen: Babel to Abstraction marks a major retrospective exhibition of the renowned late artist George Claessen’s multifaceted work, the first presentation of his work in London for 18 years. Presented by London gallery Three Highgate, which is in the vicinity where Claessen himself lived and worked, the works on show span over 70 years and reflect his extraordinary career as an artist and his commitment to abstraction, stating “Every hue and nuance from a prism comes.”
Born in Sri Lanka and later moving to London in 1949 where he lived for the rest of his life, George Claessen (1909-99) was a self-taught artist and poet whose art was characterised by his mystical outlook and beliefs.
Claessen was a founding member of the ‘43 Group, a 20th-century modern art movement established in August 1943 in Colombo, Sri Lanka who embraced modern European artistic forms over traditional Sri Lankan forms while also using some of their own cultural origins as the building bricks for a new art. Poetry was also at the centre of all of the ‘43 Group’s art and almost all of its members were practitioners of more than one art, allowing for a wider vision. In the 1960s Claessen joined the New Vision Group in London, which consisted of artists committed to abstract and avant-garde art in its many iterations.
Throughout his career, Claessen expressed in his art and poetry a unique lyrical language based on his emotional and mystical outlook. It is for this calm poetic abstract expressionist style that Claessen is most celebrated. As the exhibition curator, Alistair Hicks, views it, Classen ‘treats paint like he treats the words in his poems. He is shifting them around like a child with putty.’
He started to draw and paint aged 29 after joining the Colombo Port Commission as a draughtsman, an occupation he continued until his retirement. It is notable that it was not until he was safely settled in London that Claessen fully made the leap into abstraction – a place where abstraction had become the currency of the avant-garde. Yet his abstraction is a world entirely of its own – he made a home in his art.
George Classen exhibited his work internationally until well into the 70s, while working as a draughtsman until his retirement. He showed at Venice Biennale in 1956 and at the Saõ Paulo, Brazil, Biennale of 1959, where he won an award. His solo shows included Velasquez Gallery, Melbourne, 1947; Archer Gallery, London, 1950; New Vision Centre Gallery, London, 1962; Stanhope Gallery, London, 1975; Gallery 706, Colombo, 1993; Frank T Sabin Gallery, London, 2000; The Gallery Cafe, Colombo, 1999 and 2018: and Paradise Road Gallery, Colombo, 2021.