Celia Paul

Celia Paul (born 1959) is an Indian-born British artist.

Biography

Celia Paul was born on 11 November 1959 in Thiruvananthapuram (formerly called Trivandrum), South India. She is a British Citizen.

From 197681 she studied at the Slade School of Fine Art in London, where she met Lucian Freud who was a visiting tutor. She had a relationship with Freud between 1978 and 1988 and has a son by him, Frank Paul (born 10 December 1984), who is also an artist.[1] Celia Paul appears in several paintings by Freud, including Girl in a Striped Nightshirt (198385; Tate, London).[2]

Paul was represented by Bernard Jacobson Gallery, London from 1984 to 1986 and then by Marlborough Fine Art, London from 1989 to 2014. She has been represented by Victoria Miro, London since May 2014.[3]

Style and influences

Celia Paul's paintings are intimate depictions of people and places that she knows well. She does no portrait commissions. Her paintings have a haunting otherworldly feeling. "Throughout all her work the sense of sight is associated with a world of potential, within. This is how a sense of the ineffable is able to be communicated".[4] Paul worked on a series of paintings of her mother from 1977 to 2007 and since then she has concentrated on her four sisters, especially her sister Kate. "…[T]he real strength of Paul's project becomes apparent with time: the concentrated emotional energy of chronicling a family and its subtle shifts over many years".[5] Recently her work has taken a new direction and she has been focussing on landscape and the sea. "[S]he …is a creator of subterranean images. Her canvases are Impressionism in conversation with modernism- objective but felt".[6]

Solo exhibitions

Group exhibitions

Films and interviews

Public collections

British Museum, London; National Portrait Gallery, London, Victoria and Albert Museum, London; Saatchi Collection, London; Abbot Hall, Kendal; Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; Yale Center for British Art, Connecticut; Carlsberg Foundation, Copenhagen; Frissiras Museum, Athens; Herzog Anton Ulrich Museum, Brunswick, Germany.

Further reading

References

  1. Moorhead, Joanna (12 October 2012). "'Lucian wanted us to have a baby'".
  2. http://www.tate.org.uk/art/artworks/freud-girl-in-a-striped-nightshirt-t13719 22 May 2005
  3. "Victoria Miro - Artists".
  4. Angus Cook, Introduction to Celia Paul: Recent Work at Marlborough Fine Art, October 1991
  5. Jackie Wullschlager: Financial Times, 6 July 2014
  6. "Letter from London: Celia Paul and Henri Matisse". 28 July 2014.

External links

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