DETAIL : Roy DE MAISTRE 1894�1968 'Forest landscape' [Gum trees] c1920  oil on cardboard NGA 1971.44
Howard TAYLOR | Trees
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TAYLOR, Howard
Australia 1918 – 2001
United Kingdom 1938-49; United Kingdom, Europe 1961-62
Trees 1950
Painting
egg tempera on hardboard
gesso ground directly onto hardboard
40.5 (h) x 50.8 (w) cm
Framed 56.5 (h) x 66.6 (w) x 4.0 (d) cm
signed and dated l.r., in purple egg tempera "HTAYLOR/1950"
Gift of Esther Constable in memory of her husband Dr Roy K. Constable, Perth 1987
NGA 1987.762
Courtesy Howard H. Taylor Estate/Galerie Düsseldorf
VIEW: Article |

Trees is one of a number of works in egg tempera that Howard Taylor painted from around 1950. The work is a disciplined study of line, light and shape combined to create an overall shimmering effect. In this work Taylor explored the ephemeral qualities of light and colour and the rich and subtle surfaces he observed in the Australian bush. He said that: ‘painting the Australian landscape involved a big change for me, and another change was that I soon got more involved in tempera painting … if you paint in tempera you become engaged in a highly disciplined technique … you’ve got to plan right from the beginning.’1

In Trees the composition is divided into distinct planes, the horizontal bands set against a vertical cluster of trees. Positioned in the centre of the work is the apex of a circle. This circle is filled with light from an unknown source. Around its perimeter are eight trees, the trunks of which create long shadows stretching to the bottom right-hand corner of the composition. The tree foliage resembles a three-dimensional structure, carefully constructed by lines and subtle tonal variations. The shape of a figure 8 defines this arrangement, symbolic of infinity and the cyclical patterns of nature. Trees is a dense picture, yet the overall effect is one of lightness. The meticulous repetition of line suggests both the complexity and ethereal delicacy of the natural world.

1 Howard Taylor, interview by James Murdoch in 1986 for the Australia Council Archival Art Series. See Gary Dufour & Allan Watson (eds), Howard Taylor: phenomena, Perth: Art Gallery of Western Australia & Sydney: Museum of Contemporary Art, 2003, p. 61.