Jonathan Yeo (b. 1970)
Artist's Resale Right ("Droit de Suite"). Artist's… Read more
Jonathan Yeo (b. 1970)

Claire's Room (Grayson Perry)

Details
Jonathan Yeo (b. 1970)
Claire's Room (Grayson Perry)
oil on canvas
50 x 40 1/8in. (127 x 102cm.)
Painted in 2013
Provenance
Private Collection, London.
Exhibited
London, National Portrait Gallery, Jonathan Yeo - Portraits, 2013-2015, p. 188 (detail in studio installation illustrated, pp. 14, 19; illustrated in colour, p. 189). This exhibition later travelled to Manchester, The Lowry and Newcastle, The Laing Art Gallery.
Special notice
Artist's Resale Right ("Droit de Suite"). Artist's Resale Right Regulations 2006 apply to this lot, the buyer agrees to pay us an amount equal to the resale royalty provided for in those Regulations, and we undertake to the buyer to pay such amount to the artist's collection agent.

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Lot Essay

‘Grayson Perry’s transvestism is not inflated or caricatured (that would be too easy), but rendered with an intense seriousness of purpose that invites the viewer to engage more profoundly with his motivations’
–Philip Mould


Completed in 2013, and included in the artist’s landmark exhibition at the National Portrait Gallery that year, Claires Room (Grayson Perry) is an iconic work from Jonathan Yeo’s celebrated portrait practice. In a palette of muted pinks and creams, Yeo depicts fellow artist Grayson Perry, dressed as his female alter-ego Claire. Against a backdrop of mottled abstract textures, he renders his subject in crisp high definition, lavishing piercing scrutiny upon the veins beneath his skin, the play of light and shadow across his face and hair, and the gleaming whites of his eyes. Streaks of rose delineate the bodice of his dress, whilst the skirt, walls and floor dissolve into swathes of marbled colour. Along with a painting of Damien Hirst, completed the same year, the work represents a rare depiction of an artist within Yeo’s oeuvre, taking its place among portraits of public figures including Tony Blair, Prince Philip, Cara Delevingne, George W. Bush and Malala Yousafzai. It is a masterpiece of close observation, demonstrating the artist’s ability to reveal the intimate, human characteristics of his celebrity sitters. As Philip Mould writes, ‘Grayson Perry’s transvestism is not inflated or caricatured (that would be too easy), but rendered with an intense seriousness of purpose that invites the viewer to engage more profoundly with his motivations’ (P. Mould, ‘Art and Artifice’, in The Many Faces of Jonathan Yeo, exh. cat., National Portrait Gallery, London, 2013, p. 171).

Yeo rose to prominence in the 1990s and early 2000s, having famously taught himself to paint whilst recovering from Hodgkin’s disease. During his recovery, he regularly visited Tate Britain and began to experiment with different idioms, drawing inspiration from Cubism, Abstract Expressionism and the paintings of Lucian Freud, among others. His works are defined by their subtle palettes, textured backdrops and often unfinished bodies, wrought from a combination of photographs and live sittings. ‘I tend to start off with photographs, partly because you’re looking for that sparky moment when someone is not being conscious of being looked at’, he explains in conversation with Sarah Howgate. ‘So it’s not the first photo you take but probably the two hundredth, when they’re getting bored of it. I then use a combination of photographs to start the initial process of composition and to get a sense of the layout. But then at some point you need to let the experience of them and the sight of them on different days take over.’ In the same interview, Yeo speaks of the experience of painting Hirst and Perry: figures with whom he felt an unusual affinity. ‘They may do very different work, but you feel that these are people who spend so much time thinking about things that are similar to what you do’, he asserts. ‘You are aware that they may test you and want to know why you’ve made certain decisions. So of all the people I’ve painted, I felt more pressure with those two, I think, than with almost anyone else’ (J. Yeo, quoted in S. Howgate, ‘Under the Skin of Jonathan Yeo: An Interview’, https://www.jonathanyeo.com/new-index [accessed 25 January 2019]).

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