Suzanne Perlman is 91 years young and religiously paints every day with the same vitality, intensity and grasp of colour as she has done all her adult life. A pupil of Oskar Kokoschka in Salzburg and Sidney Gross in New York, the influences of both artists are readily evident in her work.

Extensively exhibited in Europe, the Caribbean and North America, this is the first occasion when she has agreed to a comprehensive survey of her work since moving here some 25 years ago, and focuses on her distinctive views and vision of her passionately adopted city of London.

Perlman was born in Budapest in 1923 to a family of antique dealers and collectors and her childhood was surrounded by art and artists. After marrying young, Suzanne moved with her Dutch husband to the Netherlands. Their stay was short as the Second World War engulfed Europe. Their escape from Rotterdam via Paris to the southern Caribbean island of Curaçao, off the Venezuelan coast, is a story of Hollywood proportions; needless to say they were part of the few to survive the Holocaust that awaited if they had remained. They made their home in this island of warmth and light for over twenty years. As with Kokoschka, the crystal clear Caribbean light and local palette has left indelible marks on Perlman’s vision, and she sees and paints with this vibrancy even under grey London skies.

Given the influences on her career and life experiences she has endured, this exhibition, celebrating her ninetieth year, presents London in a uniquely bright and vivacious fashion in a way that perhaps only an artist such as Perlman could.

Perlman studied at Columbia University, New York, San Miguel de Allende, Guanajuato, Mexico and at St Martin’s School of Art in London. The most influential period was in the 1950s when she was selected to work with Kokoschka in Salzburg. This was the clear catalyst for the following half century and beyond. Whilst undeniably individual, her expressionist vigour and joyous relationship with colour combine with a rare sensitivity and impressive command of her often demanding and complex subject matter. Her ‘expressionist dash’ (in the words of John Russell Taylor from a Times of London review) and energetic palette revel in the Kokoschka tradition.

Perlman’s depictions of London are nevertheless entirely her own. Hers is a varied city, part Arcadia, part metropolis, part fantasy and part documentary. Her subjects include summer revels and autumn blooms in London’s parks; traffic-laden busy thoroughfares; Covent Garden nightlife; booksellers on a glowing Southbank, and architectural vistas of the Houses of Parliament, Trafalgar Square and St. Paul’s.

Her engagement with the river Thames flowing through the centre of London is so powerful that one can only imagine it is born from her love of the sea around Curaçao. She captures the moment (one of many) powerfully In her painting ‘Parliament’ (1996), depicting both river and architecture beneath an almost Turnerian sky. In ‘The London Eye’ (2011), her fusion of luscious pinks and purples, deftly and seamlessly integrated within her expressionist vigour, presents the viewer with an almost sensuous experience.

Perlman’s love affair with London and its sprawling variety continues daily: whether on her walks or in her car (she is never without her sketch pad) or in her studio where she works every day. She is clearly at one with Samuel Johnson who observed that: ‘When a man is tired of London, he’s tired of life.’

The Gallery in Cork Street
28 Cork Street
London W1S 3NG United Kingdom
Ph. +44 (0)20 76043991
info@benuri.org.uk
www.benuri.org.uk

Opening hours
Monday - Saturday from 10am to 6pm
Sunday from 12pm to 4pm

Related images

  1. London, River Scenes, Thames and Saint Pauls, oil on canvas, 2011, 96 x 111 cm
  2. London, River Scenes, Book fair on the South Bank, oil on canvas, 1996, 91 x 100 cm
  3. London, River Scenes, Parliment, oil on canvas, 1996, 127.3 x 152.5 cm
  4. London parks, Bank holiday in St James' Park, oil on board, 2005, 106.5 x 122 cm
  5. Interiors and Covent Garden, Afterdark at Maida Vale, oil on canvas, 2011, 90.7 x 100 cm
  6. London parks, April in Waterlow Park, oil on canvas, 2006, 71 x 91.5 cm