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Girl in a pinafore (painted 1950)~ oil on canvas ~ 34 x 20 inches |
Fauvist Paintings,May 13th - June 7th Stella Steyn (1907-1987)Fully illustrated catalogue available from the gallery
Catalogue introduction by Robert O'Byrne Mystery swirls around Stella Steyn like one of the circus acrobats she was so fond of painting in her mid-twenties. A precocious talent, she enjoyed early success and critical approbation. ‘I am glad to see that Miss Stella Steyn’s exhibition in Stephen’s Green is attracting the attention that the excellence of the pictures displayed deserves, ‘commented a reviewer in The Irish Times in June, 1930. Such positive encouragement naturally led to expectations that Steyn would become a leading figure in the Irish art world. |
Women in conversation (exhibited at the Royal Academy London, 1953)~ oil on canvas ~ 42 x 50 inches |
Since then, more of her work has emerged, but only gradually; a studio sale, for example, was held in 2005, eighteen years after her death. The impression is given that, having disappeared for such a lengthy period, she wished to re-introduce herself to admirers very gradually. |
Still life with flowers and apples (circa 1950)~ oil on canvas ~ 30 x 36 inches |
Almost sixty years later, writing in The Irish Times, Hilda van Stockum recalled how ‘Stella Steyn awed me with her elegance; she had long black ringlets framing her face, and wore artistic colour combinations and fashionable get-ups. She was very talented.’ |
Portrait in blue (painted 1940) ~ oil on canvas ~ 29 x 20 inches |
with avidity to what was occurring there. But whereas the likes of Mainie Jellett and Evie Hone became advocates of Cubism, Steyn’s instincts led her towards Fauvism with its brilliant colouring and bold simplification of form. While the subject matter might vary, her work retained these two characteristics throughout the decades ahead. During the five years after 1926 she spent substantial periods of time in Paris, taking a studio in Montparnasse but also sometimes travelling around the rest of France with a sketchbook. ‘I drew varied scenes of French life in the markets and streets,’ she recalled in a short, posthumously published memoir, writing of the drawings she made, ‘I transferred this material to lithographic stones and on to copper plates, adapting and recomposing it on the stones and plates in Paris when I returned there.’ Paris remained central to her, a city she returned to again and again; in March 2008 a sketchbook of 67 Parisian charcoal drawings dating from 1977 was offered for sale at auction in Cork.
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The pink chair (painted 1952) ~ oil on canvas ~ 36 x 24 inches |
Ulysses Sylvia Beach (and thanks to him she also met fellow Dubliner Samuel Beckett who was just eighteen months her senior and at one time her boyfriend, according to Theo Snoddy in his Dictionary of Irish Artists). It was through this connection that she received the invitation to illustrate a section of Finnegan’s Wake. Though the author ‘tried to explain about meaning on more than one level,’ she later claimed not to have understood the text - a confession made by many of the novel’s other readers before and since. But in return she reported that ‘Joyce had very little understanding of the visual arts and would have claimed none.’ |
Standing nude on a pink ground (painted 1951)~ oil on canvas ~ 36 x 24 inches |
It was, however, for political rather than artistic reasons that she chose to quit the Bauhaus, and Germany which was then witnessing the rise of Nazism and its accompanying virulent anti-Semitism. Around the same time she met linguist David Ross who she married in 1938. When the Second World War broke out a year later, she had already settled in England with her new husband and would remain there for the rest of her life. It appears that during the war years and their immediate aftermath she scarcely, if at all, drew or painted and the next outburst of creativity dates from the late 1940s onwards. No explanation can be given for this long lull. War need not have forced her into inactivity; after all, plenty of other artists continued to be highly productive throughout the period and quite a number of them were employed in an official capacity. Steyn’s graphic skills could have been put to good use and yet there is no evidence that she worked either for herself or anyone else. |
Self-portrait in a blue dress ~ oil on canvas ~ 31 x 28 inches |
Contemporary Art Society at the Tate Gallery, London, also in 1953 (see catalogue image no. 16). Once more, after 1961 she showed very little. Dated canvases indicate that she continued to work, but not to exhibit. It is as though the previous ten years of public display had left her drained of energy and disinclined to repeat the exercise again.
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Standing nude on a white ground, signed and dated 1949 ~ oil on canvas ~ 42 x 21 inches |
might be. Others have their heads turned away, not out of shyness but rather indifference to the onlooker as they go about their tasks. The outline of their form always boldly delineated and their figures sharing the same ripe fulsomeness, they are shown against a monochrome backdrop that serves to enhance their statuesque quality. Since some of these pictures are entitled Self-portrait, it becomes evident that Steyn was on certain occasions her own model but whether that was always the case cannot be confirmed. Like so much else about her life, it continues to be a matter of speculation. And therein lies the paradox of Stella Steyn’s art: for all the apparent joyousness and unquestionable brilliancy of colour, the deftness of line and graphic skill, its real appeal ultimately lies beyond any immediate gratification provided by these attributes. And yet what might be the fundamental source of that appeal cannot be fully explained. Ultimately the work has become as much a riddle as is the artist’s life. The mystery of Stella Steyn remains unsolved. A writer and journalist, Robert O’Byrne is the author of a biography of Sir Hugh Lane. His most recent book, a history of the Irish Georgian Society, will be published in October, 2008. |
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the molesworth gallery, 16 Molesworth Street, Dublin 2, Ireland |
