Landscapes

created between 2015 - 2019

Essay written by Lilias Wigan

Paintings are for sale - to enquire please email info@williamfoyle.com

‘Landscapes’ exhibited at Asia House, 2019 - photography by Naomi Goggin

 

The Great Hungarian Plain I, 2015, 101 x 119 cm, Oil on canvas | For Sale

Essay by Lilias Wigan

Engaging with a space between ethereal landscape painting and organic abstraction, William Foyle’s recent paintings prioritise a commitment to experience and its relationship with time. Intrigued by his paternal Hungarian heritage, Foyle was spurred on to travel extensively through the lesser-known outposts of Eastern Europe. It began by car; he drove across Serbia in 2015, then Romania and Bulgaria. But it was when he began exploring train routes that his latest body of work germinated. From Turkey to Hungary, Slovakia, Romania and Bulgaria, and across the continent to North Africa and India, the aperture of a train window soon became Foyle’s means of unperturbed observation. It inspired a new direction in his painting. 



 

The Great Hungarian Plain XXII, 2016, 108 x 140 cm, Oil on Canvas | For sale

 

Arrival I, 189 x 197 cm, Oil on canvas | For sale

photography by Naomi Goggin

 

Foyle’s interest in crossing such landscapes is rooted in the history of forced human displacement. The sense of journeying can first be traced in his stirring Holocaust series, and has profoundly affected his work thereafter. Foyle spent his early years scrutinising the figure before feeling compelled to change focus. His new landscapes are conceived years before the paintings are realised; a gradual, brewing contemplation eventually surfaces as brush is put to canvas. The resulting rhythmical orchestrations of paint engulf the senses. 

Gate II, 2017, 152 X 168 cm, Oil on Canvas | For sale

 

The Great Hungarian Plain XXV, 2017, 184 x 184 cm, Oil on canvas | For Sale

 

Arrival II, 2018, Oil on Canvas, 145 x 229 cm | For sale

photography by Naomi Goggin

 

Foyle nurtures his curiosity about landscape by documenting his journeys on a pocket camera. The blurred images – otherworldly horizontal planes – scatter his studio in Wood Green, North London. A single photograph is isolated before beginning each painting, the rest being removed out of sight. Although compositions are unplanned, they become apparent during the process – usually an intense working period resolved within a single day or night in a climactic outpouring. 

 

Arrival I, 2017, 189 x 197 cm, Oil on Canvas | For sale

 
 
 

The Great Hungarian Plain XXVIII, 2017, 118 X 167 cm, Oil on Canvas | For sale

 

Arrival II, 2018, 145 x 229 cm, Oil on Canvas | For Sale

 
 

Poland II, 2017, 169 x 247 cm, Oil on canvas | For sale

Through the skilful build-up of thin layers of pigment, the images reveal themselves over time. Foyle has reduced his palette to just three colours and yet, with tonal autonomy, he realises subliminally complex insignia. Visceral, free-flowing forms breathe intense colour on the surface of the canvas and are compellingly ambiguous. The sinuous, melodic shapes resist containment and defy any linear marking; they are freed further by the significantly large canvases, as Foyle pushes the paint to its utmost limits. While he works, recordings of soundscapes usually fill the quiet of the studio; they appear to fuse with the sweeping symbolist imagery across the canvas – their melodious energy carrying both melancholy and vigour. 

 

Arrival III, 2018, 191.5 x 193 cm, Oil on canvas | For Sale

photography by Naomi Goggin

 

Easter at Borrobol (left) and Gate III (right) exhibited at Asia House, London in 2019

photography by Naomi Goggin

 
 

By capturing the very essence of nostalgia and rendering it present, Foyle’s paintings challenge us to delve into a dialogue with our subconscious. These psychological landscapes, with their discordant harmonies, have an uncanny ability to be both about time and at once defy it. They demand the viewer’s complete absorption as one finds oneself journeying along a path of reminiscence, anticipation and lyrical expression. 

by Lilias Wigan

Mosshouses I, 2018 146 x 125 cm Oil on Canvas | For sale

 

Mosshouses II, 2018, 187 x 188 cm, Oil on Canvas | For sale

 
 

A View towards Knock Dhu II, 2019, 226 x 140 cm, Oil on canvas | For Sale

 

Paintings exhibited at Asia House, London, 2019

photography by Naomi Goggin

 

Scotland II, 2018, 145.2 x 208cm, Oil on Canvas

photography by Naomi Goggin

ALL ENQUIRIES:
E: info@williamfoyle.com

To request a PDF of available works and prices please click the button below