The Systems Group was a group of British artists working in the constructivist tradition. The group was formed after an inaugural Helsinki exhibition in 1969 entitled Systeemi•System. The exhibition coordinator Jeffrey Steele together with Malcolm Hughes, invited the participating artists to form a group in 1970. The Systems Group had no manifesto and no formal membership; it existed for the purpose of discussion and exhibition rather than direct collaboration.[1][2]
The group disbanded in 1976 following political differences among its members. Despite this, individual members kept in touch and exhibited together for over four decades.[4]
Gillian Wise and John Ernest had previously exhibited with the Constructionist Group. Regarding group meetings, although Steele brought the group together and was a key member, Hughes subsequently took over the running of the group, which met regularly at his Putney studio.[8]
Beginnings
In November 1969, nine artists selected by Jeffrey Steele exhibited in an exhibition entitled Systeemi•System: An exhibition of syntactic art from Britain at the invitation of the Amos Anderson Art Museum in Helsinki.[9] The exhibition was organised by Steele's Finnish wife Arja Nenonen (1936-2011) and the exhibiting artists were: Malcolm Hughes, Michael Kidner, Peter Lowe, David Saunders, Peter Sedgley, Jean Spencer, Jeffrey Steele, Michael Tyzack and Gillian Wise. Steele chose artists whose interests were associated with his own developing interest in the theory of syntax in art.[1] Each artist selected a different choice of elements, using some kind of rational principle to construct their work.[10]
Syntactic Art
Syntactic art considers syntactic (structural) relationships between artwork elements more important than any semantic (referential) or pragmatic (expressive) relationships. In other words, in syntactic art the structure and form of the artwork takes precedence over its figurative representation or the viewer's interpretation.
According to semiotician Charles Morris "language is a social system of signs mediating the response of members of the community to one another and to their environment." Additionally "to understand a language or to use it correctly is to follow the rules of usage (syntactical, semantical, and pragmatical) current in the given social community." [11]
Anthony Hill appropriated Morris's syntactic-semantic-pragmatic framework into his own work, which in turn influenced some members of the Systems Group. 'By syntactic, Hill meant "the relations in the constituent structure, the internal plastic logic", or, put more simply, what happens within the paintings.' [13]
A clear example of Syntactic Art, or Constructionist Art, is found in Peter Lowe's "Spiral of 8 integers" where, starting from the central square, a sequence of integers is added until the square root of the sum is found to be a whole number, i.e. (1 + 2 + 3 + 4 + 5 + 6 + 7 + 8) = 36, and = 6. Lowe presents the syntactic relationship visually as a spiral pattern of smaller squares, culminating in the outer 6 x 6 square. Although it is possible to view his work mathematically, Lowe emphasises that he discovered this relationship empirically.[14][15]
Political Milieu
The Cold War lasted from 1945 to 1991. In the short period of its existence the Systems Group accepted the label of Constructivist, but this term was identified with Russia and hence associated with "The Evil Empire". Quoting Peter Lowe: "In the art world, the CIA was covertly ensuring the supremacy of Abstract Expressionism and Minimalism over Russian Constructivism and Formalism as an element of US Cold War propaganda. Local abstract expressionists proliferated in the UK and Abstract Expressionism was promoted in art schools. Journalists and directors of our national institutions favoured US art and linked their careers to it. There was also a good deal of tabloid comment with Syntactic work being invariably labelled 'cold and clinical'. The term 'system' had acquired negative connotations and it was an act of defiance on our part to use it in relation to our group."[16]
Political Differences
Several members of the Systems Group held the view that all acts were political, therefore art was a vehicle for political ideology. At the time, Lowe could not agree, feeling his visual research was apolitical, having been influenced by the writings of Theo van Doesburg's in his essay "An Answer to the Question: Should the New Art Serve the Proletariat?".[17] Things came to a head at a meeting in 1976, after which Lowe resigned from the group. The remaining members found no resolution to their political differences and disbanded shortly afterwards.[18]
^ abLynton, Norbert (1972). Systems. Arts Council 1972-3.
^Fowler, Alan (2007), Towards a Rational Aesthetic: Constructive Art in Post-war Britain, Osborne Samuel Ltd, p. 9, ISBN978-0-9549783-5-8
^Grieve, Alastair (2005), Constructed Abstract Art in England After the Second World War: A Neglected Avant-Garde, Yale University Press, pp. 9, 54, ISBN978-0-300-10703-6
^ abcdFowler, Alan (2008), A Rational Aesthetic: the Systems Group and associated artists, Southampton City Art Gallery, pp. 18, 19, 45, 188, 189, 194, 195, 196, ISBN978-0-901723-1{{citation}}: CS1 maint: ignored ISBN errors (link)
^Fowler, Alan (2008), A Rational Aesthetic: the Systems Group and associated artists, Southampton City Art Gallery, p. 44, ISBN978-0-901723-1{{citation}}: CS1 maint: ignored ISBN errors (link)
^Van Doesburg, Theo. "Anti-Tendenzkunst". Internet Archive. De Stijl. Retrieved 7 December 2024.
^Fowler, Alan (2008), A Rational Aesthetic: the Systems Group and associated artists, Southampton City Art Gallery, p. 45, ISBN978-0-901723-1{{citation}}: CS1 maint: ignored ISBN errors (link)
^Fowler, Alan (2007), Towards a Rational Aesthetic: Constructive Art in Post-war Britain, Osborne Samuel Ltd, p. 10, ISBN978-0-9549783-5-8
^"Constructivism". Routledge Encyclopedia of Modernism. Routledge. 1 December 2016. Retrieved 20 January 2024.
^"Matrix". Arnolfini. Arnolfini Gallery. 10 June – 7 July 1971. Retrieved 20 January 2024.
^"Systems". BSL Tour: Systems. Tate Britain. Retrieved 19 January 2024.
^"Systems Group". Artist Biographies: British and Irish Artists of the Twentieth Century. Artist Biographies Ltd. Retrieved 18 January 2024.
^"Constructive Context". Arts Council Collection. Arts Council England. 1 January – 1 December 1978. Retrieved 19 January 2024.
^"Hayward Annual '78". Arts & Culture. 23 August – 8 October 1978. Retrieved 19 January 2024.
^"PIER+OCEAN". Arts & Culture. 8 May – 22 June 1980. Retrieved 19 January 2024.
^Moore, Tania; Winner, Calvin (Ed) (2021). Rhythm & Geometry: constructionist art in Britain since 1951. Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts. ISBN978-1-9161336-8-6.
External links
[1] Constructivist Art in Britain 1913-2005 by Alan Fowler (2006)