Wings of Love (Pearson)

(Redirected from Wings of Love (painting))

Wings of Love (c. 1972) is a painting by English artist Stephen Pearson. It has been hailed variously as a classic product of 70s popular culture, and as a well-known example of kitsch.

Description edit

The painting depicts a muscular naked man being delivered to a callipygian naked woman on the wing-tip of a gigantic swan.[1] The swan was "cemented in the imagination as a creature of romance for a whole generation of impressionable working class suburban kids". The anthropomorphic projection may not have been entirely random;[2] swans are believed to take a mate for life, and the graceful white birds might symbolize monogamous felicity.[2]

Artist edit

Stephen Pearson was born in Yorkshire and studied painting in London and northern England, but referred to himself as self-taught. He listed his influences as Caravaggio, Turner, and other artists concerned with representation of light in its most dramatic forms. Among contemporary painters, he was most influenced by the surrealists, but ultimately rejected the negative content of much of their work and focused instead on romantic fantasies. Pearson worked in oils and pastels and occasionally watercolors and gouache to create "quasi-pornographic, quasi-religious dreamscapes".[3] He exhibited in London and provincial cities, and gained a worldwide reputation from the widespread reproduction of his work.[4] He died in March 2003.[5]

Reproduction edit

After the Second World War, shops such as Woolworths sold large numbers of colorful and sentimental or 'exotic' prints.[6] As a commercially reproduced picture, Wings of Love was sold ready-framed in many high street outlets, and became a best-selling image in the early 1970s. By 1992, 2.5 million copies of Wings of Love had been sold, many outside of the UK.[7][8]

The most notable appearance of Wings of Love was in a mural commissioned for a wall beside one of Saddam Hussein's many swimming pools in his palace.[9][better source needed] The mural was recreated in the form of a projection on the wall of the Platform Arts Gallery, Belfast, in February 2009. In the exhibition ‘Taste: The New Religion’, at Manchester's Cornerhouse Arts Centre, Wings of Love finds a place beside pictures by Vladimir Tretchikoff, John Lynch and Peter Lightfoot as an example of the independent course of popular taste. Andrea Patrick Byrne, an award-winning London-based artist, references Wings of Love in her 2014 audiovisual self-portrait Girlhood.[10]

Popular culture edit

The print house Athena owed much of its resurgence in the 1980s to selling kitsch prints of a fantasy-world type, such as Unicorn Princess, Beach Lovers and A Dolphin Moon, that were inspired by Stephen Pearson's work.[11] Wings of Love was immortalized on the wall of Stan and Hilda Ogden's house in Coronation Street[12] and the painting also achieved cult status through its appearance in the 1977 film of Mike Leigh's play Abigail's Party,[13] In the film, the painting provokes a heated debate on the nature of "erotic art"; this culminates in Beverly Moss's husband Laurence dropping dead of a heart attack. The film Mona Lisa also features Wings of Love as part of recurring references to surrealism.[14]

References edit

  1. ^ "It isn't bad taste. It's a pivotal work of transgressive irony; Michael Bracewell on an exhibition which challenges all your values". The Guardian. 13 November 1999.
  2. ^ a b Allen, Jeremy (November 27, 2014). "Swan Songs: Baxter Dury Interviewed". The Quietus.
  3. ^ "Coming soon to a wall near you". Evening Standard. November 8, 2000.
  4. ^ "stephen pearson". Thecontainergallery.co.uk. Retrieved 2017-05-25.
  5. ^ "Obituary". Art Business News. 30 (6): 14. June 2003.
  6. ^ McMillan, Michael (2009). The Front Room: Migrant Aesthetics in the Home.
  7. ^ Whitford, Frank (October 11, 1992). "Sunday At home with the master". The Sunday Times.
  8. ^ "HOMESTYLE: HOW'S IT HANGIN'?; THESE DAYS WE CHANGE THE ART ON OUR WALLS AS FREQUENTLY AS OUR.". Sunday Mirror. 28 January 2001. You can still buy it and in Scandinavia it's still on their bestseller list. When it was first available in 1972, its popularity was due to its encapsulation of the dawning of the Age of Aquarius - freedom. Plus it's a bit rude.
  9. ^ Sadiq, Rashida (2011). "Review: Saddam's Babylon". Super Massive Black Hole Magazine (8).
  10. ^ "Self Portraits & Landscapes". beesofrita.com.
  11. ^ "Weekend: WONDERWALLS: There was the tennis girl, that man and baby, the icy, airbrushed women with electric blue eye shadow and glossy red lips. Think of the pictures that bedecked the bedrooms of teenagers 20 years ago and one name springs to mind: Athena. As the 1980s enjoy a revival, Lindsay Baker looks back at the poster company that became a phenomenon". The Guardian. November 10, 2001.
  12. ^ "Coming soon to a wall near you; Charles Saatchi reckons Wayne Hemingway's collection of kitsch art is 'the right stuff'. NICK CURTIS says the time is ripe for the reinvention of tat". Evening Standard. November 8, 2000.
  13. ^ Sandbrook, Dominic (2012). Seasons in the Sun: The Battle for Britain, 1974-1979. Penguin. ISBN 9781846140327.
  14. ^ Middleton, Francesca (2014). "A Queen of Hearts and a White Rabbit: Storytelling Traditions, Lacunae and Otherness in Neil Jordan's Mona Lisa (1986)". Studies in European Cinema. 11 (3). doi:10.1080/17411548.2014.972714. S2CID 194060793.