How Joe Tilson’s dazzling, graphic artworks captured the ‘white heat’ of technology

Jake Tilson, son of the pioneering Pop artist, looks back on his father’s 1960s heyday, when his works were acquired by the Tate in London and MoMA in New York. Four of Tilson’s pieces, made between 1961 and 1967, come to auction on 19 March

Joe Tilson at his Argyll Road studio in London in the 1960s

Joe Tilson at his Argyll Road studio in London in the 1960s. Photo: © Tilson family archives. Artwork: © 2026 Joe Tilson / DACS

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Joe Tilson, R.A. (1928-2023), Geometry? 3, 1964. Oil and acrylic on wood relief. 73¾ x 73½ in (187.4 x 186.7 cm). Estimate: £30,000-50,000. Offered in the Modern British and Irish Art Day Sale on 19 March 2026 at Christie’s in London

On 19 March 2026, four works from this period will be offered by Tilson’s family in the Modern British and Irish Art Day Sale at Christie’s in London. Made between 1961 and 1967, they chart the genesis of Tilson’s career as a Pop artist. ‘They reveal how his initial concepts were a break away from traditional painting,’ says Angus Granlund, director of Modern British and Irish Art at Christie’s. ‘He was a pioneer in Pop art — his works paved the way for the second generation who followed in his footsteps.’

Born in south-east London in 1928, Tilson had wanted to be a painter since he was eight, but his father refused to let him. ‘We were a working-class family from Forest Hill. He and my mother were telegraphists in the First World War, and after it my father became very left-wing and sceptical,’ he said in an interview for Christie’s Magazine in 2016. Instead, Tilson was sent to the Brixton School of Building to train as a carpenter.

It was the Second World War that saved him. In 1949, with an ex-serviceman’s grant, he was able to enrol at St Martin’s School of Art. ‘My grandparents had no idea what it meant to be an artist,’ says Tilson’s son, Jake. ‘My father was the black sheep of the family — he broke away and lived this very alternative life that they couldn’t relate to. It was a very brave thing to do, but it also left him quite isolated from the community he grew up in.’

'We are in the middle of an invisible scientific revolution, which seems to me an extension of our nervous system.' Tilson at work in his studio, 1965

‘We are in the middle of an invisible scientific revolution, which seems to me an extension of our nervous system.’ Tilson at work in his studio, 1965. Photo: © Tilson family archives. Artwork: © 2026 Joe Tilson / DACS

At St Martin’s, Tilson met other artists such as Frank Auerbach and Leon Kossoff, who became close friends. Later, at the Royal College of Art, he fell in with Peter Blake, Richard Smith and Robyn Denny. In 1955, Tilson won the Rome Prize and went to live in Italy, where he met and married the sculptor and weaver Jos Morton. Tuscany and, later, Venice were to become their second homes.

They made a good team. ‘My mother was incredibly supportive,’ says Jake. ‘He valued her opinion; she influenced his work hugely.’ The historian Marco Livingstone observed that they both possessed an innate sculptural intelligence for their chosen materials.

‘Dad could be incredibly generous — he drove Frank Stella around when he was thinking of moving [to England], and he looked after Michael Craig-Martin when he first arrived in the UK, introducing him to all his artist friends’
Jake Tilson

In 1958, they returned to London, where Peter Blake and Richard Hamilton had become the arbiters of British Pop art. The Tilsons moved into a house on Argyll Road in west London, then an artists’ enclave of peeling stucco terraces. Tilson turned the front room into a studio, from where he chronicled the march of progress using his deeply scored instincts as a tradesman, but with a much freer allegiance to his non-conformist talent. In wood, paint and glue, he articulated the times in exploded typography like a visual Ezra Pound: ‘VOX’, ‘SECRET’, ‘YES’.

The paintings offered at Christie’s were all made during this period. They begin in 1961, with Wood Relief No. 16, a warm, unpretentious combination of plain wooden cubes and rectangles. Like the later Geometry? 3 (1964), the work references the games his children played. ‘If you walk around with children and see things through their eyes, you realise that theirs is a much more rewarding attitude,’ he said at the time.

Joe Tilson, R.A. (1928-2023), Wood Relief No. 16, 1961. Wood relief, in the artist’s frame. 37½ x 49½ in (95.2 x 121.9 cm) overall. Estimate: £5,000-8,000. Offered in the Modern British and Irish Art Day Sale on 19 March 2026 at Christie’s in London

Geometry? 3 is perhaps the best-known work coming up for sale, having been exhibited numerous times, notably in Tilson’s retrospective at the Royal Academy in 2002. An arresting painting, it is based on a sliding-tile puzzle in which pieces are moved around to complete an image; here, however, Tilson has frozen the composition mid-move. The work may be read as a wry commentary on geometric abstraction, which was often described as imposing order on chaos. Tilson, by contrast, sticks with the chaos.

‘My father never really worried about working in a “style”,’ says Jake. ‘I don’t think he liked to be pigeonholed.’

Joe Tilson, R.A. (1928-2023), The Glorious Walk through the Cosmos, 1967. Acrylic and polyurethane on wood relief. 24 x 48¼ in (61 x 122.5 cm) overall. Estimate: £15,000-25,000. Offered in the Modern British and Irish Art Day Sale on 19 March 2026 at Christie’s in London

When Yuri Gagarin returned from orbit in 1961 and reported that the Earth was blue, Tilson — like many artists — turned to the mystery and wonder of space. It was the subsequent 1965 spacewalk by NASA’s Ed White, a first for the United States, that inspired The Glorious Walk through the Cosmos (1967). The work fragments the image of the astronaut, echoing the broken transmissions that flickered across television sets in suburban living rooms. ‘We are in the middle of an invisible scientific revolution,’ Tilson said, ‘which seems to me an extension of our nervous system.’

Just three years later, however, he turned his back on the decade’s triumphalism. The intensity of the Cold War and the trauma of Vietnam left many artists disillusioned with consumer culture and technological progress. The family moved to an old rectory in Wiltshire, where they established a loose artistic community. ‘It was a bit like St Ives,’ recalls Jake Tilson. ‘Howard Hodgkin and Richard Smith lived nearby. Dad could be incredibly generous — he drove Frank Stella around when he was thinking of moving there (I think he felt New York was too hot politically), and he looked after Michael Craig-Martin when he first arrived in the UK, introducing him to all his artist friends.

Joe Tilson, R.A. (1928-2023), Reflector 2, 1966. Acrylic and polyurethane on wood and stainless steel. 13 x 14 x 6¾ in (33 x 35.5 x 17.3 cm). Estimate: £1,200-1,800. Offered in the Modern British and Irish Art Day Sale on 19 March 2026 at Christie’s in London

‘Since his death in 2023, we’ve tried to reflect that generosity by donating his paintings to hospitals, and to friends and family, rather than locking them away somewhere.’

The decade that made Tilson’s name ended, but he carried that vibrant energy forward through the next 60 years, constantly changing perspective just as the mainstream looked as if it was catching up with him. ‘Being an artist was precarious, and he had his ups and downs, but it never really fazed him,’ says Jake. ‘He just carried on working, every day, for the rest of his life.’

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The Modern British and Irish Art Evening and Day sales are on view until 18 March 2026 at Christie’s in London

Related artists: Joe Tilson

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