Skip to content
City PM
  • Germany
  • France
  • Europe
  • Markets
  • Business
  • Opinion
  • DE
  • Germany
  • France
  • Europe
  • Markets
  • Business
  • Opinion
  • DE
Sunday 23 November 2014 10:05 pm  |  Updated:  Friday 07 June 2019 5:39 pm

Tony Bevan at Ben Brown Fine Arts: The tree of life, death and the mind

By: Alex Dymoke

Add as a preferred source on Google

 
Painter Tony Bevan speaks ahead of his show at Ben Brown Fine Arts.
 
Tony Bevan established a name for himself with blood-coloured self-portraits that snarled and gurned and twisted into the white of the canvas. Meeting him today, you’d be forgiven for asking, where are the devilish flared nostrils, the vast egg cranium mapped with veins? A slight man of sixty-odd with a winning smile and soft northern lilt, it’s immediately clear Bevan isn’t as interested in achieving a physical likeness as he is in capturing the space inside the head. Bevan paints faces but his muse is the mind.
 
Many metaphors have been employed to aid humans’ understanding of the brain: a muscle that has to be trained, a filing cabinet to be filled, a camera, a lens, a prism. In his latest exhibition, Bevan Focuses on two: the tree and the archive. With branches emerging from a trunk, curling back, tangling, growing, the former can be linked to the human nervous system. The latter, a vast expanse of neatly filed information waiting to be sifted and perused, has obvious connections with memory. The trees he paints are “isolated, like a human. I like the trunk, how it expands beyond and grasps. [The branches] are almost like elbows crossing. They’re very human-like forms and that’s what interests me, creating these spaces… in these tendon-like colours.” 
 


Painter Tony Bevan

 
And the archives? “The archives are more recent. What interested me about them was they became almost like an alphabet,” he says, gesturing to the sloped files inside the grid. “Almost like a language.” And what information, if any, do these archived documents hold? Not knowing is what gives the painting  its enigmatic power: “whether its political, military, sexual or whatever – you have no idea whether [the information] is inert or vital.” 
 
The paintings themselves are anything but inert. You have to get up close, see the scabs and blisters, the way the crimson trees smear and smudge. Photographs barely do justice to the richness of the colours. Ox-blood, rusted steel, violet – all are mixed by Bevan himself. “I grind my own pigments in acrylic. That came about many years ago when I was a student we used to make our own etching inks. You never realise there are different blacks until you make your own. Some might be charcoal, some might be burnt bone. All are different.” 
 
Burnt bone. It sounds like something you’d find lying at the foot of one Bevan’s trees if he ever turned his gaze away from the branches and towards the root. Why does he favour such rich tones? “I wanted the tendon-like rawness. All my work has a very physical and raw nature…. all this charcoal, I like the way it moves and shatters. The debris gets fixed there so the process of the making shows up in the final work. [The archive paintings] have been painted with brushes in which a lot of the bristles have been taken off. So it’s almost like a kind of gouge into the surface.” 
 


Archive by Tony Bevan

 
Bevan thinks the speckled surface looks similar to the night sky, but I think they look more like the blemishes you see on old film, the jittery flickers of the super-eight. This compounds the sense of nostalgia for a pre-digital age of dusty archives, when information had bulk to it, took up space, faded. 
 
Bevan himself refuses to fade. After studying at Bradford School of Art and then at Goldsmiths, he has lived and worked in south east London (his current studio is in Deptford) for 40 years. 
 
In March 2007 he was elected to the Royal Academy of Arts, and he’s upbeat about the state of British painting. 
 
“There’s always been a strong painting tradition in Britain, historically, and that continues. It goes in and out of popularity. The world can be quite fickle. Painting will be in for two years and then something else comes along. But I always think of  tens of thousands of years ago when someone first put a bison on a cave wall. Putting an animal there is such a wild leap for the imagination. There’s always that potential for the extension of the imagination with painting, and I think that’s why it will always be relevant.”
 
Tony Bevan: Trees and Archives will be on show from 26 November to 3 January at Ben Brown Fine Arts, 12 Brook’s Mews, London W1K 4DG 
 
 

NEXT GENERATION: TOP FIVE BRITISH PAINTERS TO WATCH


Gillian Carnegie

Gillian Carnegie

With her black and white paintings of cats, bottoms, stairs and flowers, Camberwell graduate Gillian Carnegie turns hum-drum domesticity into scenes of elegiac beauty. 
 


Catherine Storey

Catherine Storey

Conceptual painter Catherine Storey contrives connections between hollywood and the artistic movements of the twentieth century with abstracted paintings of early film equipment. 
 


Dexter Dalwood

Dexter Dalwood

Dexter Dalwood won a Turner Prize nomination in 2010 for his paintings which blend contemporary pop culture and art-historical allusions.
 


Lucy McKenzie

Lucy McKenzie

Lucy McKenzie recently exhibited in the Tate Britain’s Painting Now exhibition. Her trompe-l'œil paintings of cork boards have won admiration from critics.
 


Bartholomew Beal

Bartholomew Beal

Bartholomew Beal’s brilliantly weird paintings mix the horror of Francis Bacon with the exotic beauty of Peter Doig. He’s already being snapped up by collectors.
 

Share this article

  • Facebook
  • X
  • LinkedIn
  • WhatsApp
  • Email

Similarly tagged content:

Sections

  • Life&Style

Categories

  • Culture
  • Life&Style

Trending Articles

  • Harry Styles at Wembley Stadium review: running through the grief

  • Nottingham Forest owner Marinakis announces £210m stadium plans

  • Nothing fails to file accounts months after dissolution threat

  • I’ve taken the best train trips in the world. Here are my 5 favourites

  • Burnham tax plans spark investor rush to bank capital gains

More from City PM

  • CRH elects W. Anthony (Tony) Will to its Board of Directors

    Business Wire
  • Tony Blair has issued a call to arms – but will Labour listen?

    Opinion
    Tony Blair speaking at a press conference, addressing current political issues and highlighting future strategies.
  • Debt-saddled grads ‘risk earning less than minimum wage’ five years after leaving uni

    Education
    University graduation
  • London Indian Film Festival Returns with Star-Studded 2026 Programme Led by Aamir Khan

    Partner
    Breaking news graphic with bold headline text on a dynamic blue background representing a general news update
  • Here’s what a government led by Andy Burnham will look like

    Opinion
    Burnham cityscape featuring historic architecture and bustling streets under clear skies, highlighting urban development.
  • Burnham warns Labour of ‘final chance’ after Makerfield win

    Politics
    Andy Burnham speaking at a Labour Party event, addressing current political issues, with a focused and determined expression.
  • Purton to tuck into a weekend winner with Gusto

    Sport
    Zac Purton in action at a horse racing event, showcasing his skills as a top jockey on October 21, enhancing the races exc...
  • McCall or Rowe: A Prem Rugby titan will bow out this weekend

    Sport Business
    GettyImages 2271932499 shows a significant event related to the latest news, capturing key details and visual elements.

City PM — European politics, business and analysis.

Europe

  • Germany
  • France
  • Europe
  • UK & Ireland

Topics

  • Business
  • Markets
  • AI
  • Technology
  • Opinion
  • Energy

More

  • Politics
  • Economics
  • Fintech
  • Legal
  • Sport
  • Life

Company

  • About City PM
  • Editorial Policy
  • Corrections
  • Contact
  • Terms of Use
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy
© 2026 City PM · Published by CityPM Media, Bahnhofstrasse 65, 8001 Zürich, Switzerland
About · Editorial Policy · Corrections · Contact · Privacy