Clare Noel Shenstone (born 27 October 1948) is an English artist. She is considered notable for her cloth relief heads and her figure drawings. Her portraits hang in some major British collections including the National Portrait Gallery and the Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts.
Francis Bacon saw her degree show at the RCA and asked to buy Janet – one of her images made out of fine cloth which she referred to as her "cloth heads".[1] Bacon went on to commission a cloth head portrait of himself, which led to many sittings together over a period of four years, at a time when Bacon was largely reclusive.[2] Shenstone executed multiple Bacon studies in oil, gouache, pastel, pencil and various experimental media.[2] He became her mentor and great friend. When Bacon died in 1992, John Edwards, Bacon's friend to whom he left his estate, also asked Shenstone to produce a cloth head portrait of himself to hang next to Bacon and Janet.[2] The National Portrait Gallery in London hold examples of Shenstone's sketches of Bacon.[3]
Both the Manhattan Theatre Club Theatre in New York and the Oxford Playhouse Company commissioned sets of drawings from Shenstone in 1981.[1] Among the group shows Shenstone participated in included the Whitechapel Open at the Whitechapel Gallery in both 1983 and 1984.[1] Shenstone's connections to Bacon led to her involvement in the 1992 exhibition Artist of the Colony Room: a Tribute to Muriel Belcher held at the Parkin Gallery. The same venue hosted Portraits of Francis Bacon in 1998 which included Shenstones' studies of Bacon.[1]
Solo exhibitions
2007 - The Speaker and I, Ben Brown Fine Arts, London.
2005 - The Leicester Gallery at the Business Centre, London.
The New Walk Museum and Gallery, Leicester.
Naughton Gallery at Queens University, Belfast.
‘Anima’ Koichi Yanagi, New York.
2004 - The Leicester Gallery Commonwealth Institute, London.
“Her very ambitious and wide-ranging exhibition Personification at the Sainsbury Centre was one of the most successful exhibitions ever held at the Centre”, Charles Saumarez Smith, Director National Gallery.
"Duality is essential Shenstone: engaging with humanity through images of name and unnamed individuals, but also exploring and extending art. We, coming to it, cannot separate the art-ness from the human-ness. They are interdependent, fused in the work.” Art historian, Norbert Lynton.
“Distinctive, penetrating eye for the psychological make-up of her sitters” – John Rosenfield, Art Historian and Professor Emeritus, Harvard University.
“Through Clare’s work, Lisa (Sainsbury) ‘re-established’ the close relationship she and Bob enjoyed with Francis Bacon. Lisa has commented that it is a curious experience to rediscover an artist in the process of discovering the work of another.” Dame Elizabeth Esteve-Coll, Director of the Victoria and Albert Museum 1987–95.
“Again and again she presents an image of someone close-by and alert, a bodily presence; again and again we are reminded that there is also a spiritual being, barely to be grasped by material means, one that we have to meet halfway by engaging with the only slightest touches of the brush.” Art historian, Norbert Lynton.
“We have grown unused to inventive realism. Clare does not fit into any obvious category of contemporary art. But the same was said of her mentor, Francis Bacon.” Charles Saumarez Smith, Director National Gallery.
References
^ abcdefDavid Buckman (2006). Artists in Britain Since 1945 Vol 2, M to Z. Art Dictionaries Ltd. ISBN0-953260-95-X.
^ abcAnthony Haden Guest (16 October 2005). "Man in the mask". The Observer. Retrieved 13 March 2018.