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Spare
is an example of a trained artist who nevertheless inhabited the kind
of psychological fringe place more usually associated with the private
worlds of the outsider artist. A mathematics prodigy, born in the
City of London, he used his knowledge of geometry as a means of inventing
drawing techniques which were supposed to reveal the workings of the
unconscious mind and subliminal perception. In the 1930's he developed
a new form of portraiture based on a logarithmic form of anamorphic
projection which he called 'Siderealism'. However, his most important
work was The Book of Pleasure (1913), a proto-surrealist text, with
immensely subtle pencil drawings, which outlined techniques for unlocking
creativity through gaining access to the communal cosmic realm of
existence. Spare's visionary drawings and metaphysical leanings at
first led to important commissions, including the illustrations for
Aleister Crowley's Equinox, Volume 1, but increasingly to artworld
isolation, though he never wavered from his chosen path. In 1941 his
Walworth Road studio and its contents were destroyed by a German bomb.
In spite of this, Spare managed to complete more than 200 new works
for a sell-out exhibition in the West End in 1947, which signalled
a rekindling of interest in his work, which remained undimmed until
his death. Also available original drawings from the book "Ugly
Ecstasy", details on request. |
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For
further information
and a list of works
currently available
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