12th Mar, 2025 12:00

From the Studio: Works from Eleven Artists' Estates

 
  Lot 108
 

108

MICHAEL UPTON (BRITISH 1938-2002)



MICHAEL UPTON (BRITISH 1938-2002)
INTERIOR WITH CHAIRS (I); INTERIOR WITH LADDERS (II)
each oil on card
16 x 24cm; 6 1/4 x 9 1/2in (i)
13 x 16.5cm; 5 x 6 1/2in (ii)
both unframed
(2)

MICHAEL UPTON (lots 108-123)

Introduction
Tiny, intimist interiors and exteriors exquisitely coloured like some latter day Vuillard
John Russell Taylor

Introduction
Upton grew up in Birmingham where he attended the College of Art before joining the Royal Academy Schools in 1958. In London he became close friends with David Hockney and Patrick Proctor, shared a flat with nascent pop artist Peter Phillips, and was awarded an RA Leverhulme Scholarship. His work was featured in the influential annual ‘Young Contemporaries’ exhibitions that Phillips masterminded over four years (1959-63). The reviewer of the 1962 show in The Times commented: 'The exhibition fairly bubbles with bright ideas and visual excitement... its weird mixture of impudence, whimsicality and beautifully tender painting is well exemplified by Derek Boshier [and] Michael Upton...'

A year later, however, after completing six identical canvases, Upton abandoned painting entirely, turning instead to conceptual art. He spent 1967-68 in New York, the recipient of a grant from the Cassandra Foundation. Others who received grants from the Foundation included John Cage, Bruce Nauman, Christo, Eduardo Paolozzi and Richard Hamilton. Increasingly Upton's interests lay in performance, and in the 1970s he founded London Calling with Peter Lloyd Jones which became an influential part of London's performance art scene. One of his works included burying a number of his paintings on a Dorset hillside. But at the end of the 1970s Upton returned again to painting, taking up a teaching role at the RA Schools.

In this later period Upton's preference was for small scale works. He often used photocopy or newspaper print as the support and he regularly produced series of images, similar to stills from a reel of film. Upton considered them 'conceptual paintings', and gained a new fan for his work in John Russell Taylor the influential art critic of The Times. In a review of 1979 Russell Taylor enthusiastically described Upton's paintings as 'tiny, intimist interiors and exteriors exquisitely coloured like some latter day Vuillard', and in his review of the British Council touring exhibition Picturing People, British Figurative Art since 1945, he singled out Upton as one of a handful of 'highly sophisticated stylists'. Also won over to Upton was the critic Mel Gooding who commented on Upton's 'subtle allusiveness (hints of Piero, Vermeer, Sickert)...another way of deepening the game, of adumbrating the mystery. An art of intimations'.

As his work evolved so Upton also gave it more loaded political messaging, inspired in part by both his earlier pop art years and current events. But following retirement and his retreat to Mousehole, Cornwall in 1996 his artistic focus shifted to the innate beauty of the local landscape and coastal views became his primary focus.

Sold for £450


 



MICHAEL UPTON (BRITISH 1938-2002)
INTERIOR WITH CHAIRS (I); INTERIOR WITH LADDERS (II)
each oil on card
16 x 24cm; 6 1/4 x 9 1/2in (i)
13 x 16.5cm; 5 x 6 1/2in (ii)
both unframed
(2)

Auction: From the Studio: Works from Eleven Artists' Estates, 12th Mar, 2025

Auction Location: London, UK  

This one-of-a-kind auction focuses on the redisovery of 20th century artists, many of whom exhibited in leading West End galleries in their day, their works featuring in museums and art galleries around the world.  All now deceased, with many having suffered undeserved obscurity since, their inclusion in From the Studio: Works from Artists' Estates puts the spotlight firmly back on them, to reveal a range of extraordinarily talented men and women. 

Most of the artists were admired, promoted and written about by eminent 20th century art critics. Several were Jewish emigres, forced from their homelands to find their way anew in Britain and elsewhere.  Many were close friends with other leading contemporary artists, sharing studios and ideas; some taught, several at the Royal College of Art. Throughout, their efforts both individually and together chart the myriad movements and counter movements that define the dynamic 20th century modernist landscape, ranging from Impressionism to Abstraction. 

PUBLIC EXHIBITION:
Sunday 9th March:12pm to 4pm
Monday 10th March: 10am to 8pm
Tuesday 11th March: 10am to 5pm

AUCTION:
Wednesday 12th March 2025, 12pm, precisely 

Contact the Pictures Department for further information | pictures@olympiaauctions.com | + 44 (0) 20 7806 5541

Viewing


PUBLIC EXHIBITION:
Sunday 9th March:12pm to 4pm
Monday 10th March: 10am to 8pm
Tuesday 11th March: 10am to 5pm

AUCTION:
Wednesday 12th March 2025, 12pm, precisely 

View all lots in this sale