Gladys Yeoman 


oil on canvas 18 x 14 in 45.7 x 35.6 cm

Collection of the Artist

 

Information

A portrait of the artist's mother, the late Gladys Dorothy Yeoman.

 
 
 
 

Further reading

It was the portraits Yeoman made on the streets of Lahore in 1974 that initially interested Peter Greenham, the then Keeper of The Royal Academy Schools who gave the young aspiring artist his first big chance in life, which was to study painting and drawing seriously from 1975 onwards. Yeoman is currently an elected member of The Royal Society of Portrait Painters.

Whatever he paints or draws or etches or sculpts, he always starts by going - as Horace said of Homer and the other great epic poets - in medias res, into the middle of things. (It’s a strange experience to be painted by him - from the inside out, as it were.) And ‘things’ are always his subject: res, solid tangible reality; not abstract ideas, not his own take on how things might or ought to be. ‘There has to be a complete removal of all subjective thought,’ he wrote to me earlier this year, ‘and we both know who difficult that is to achieve.’ We do: in some ways, Martin’s figurative painting and my travel writing are sibling arts. We both aim to catch landscapes and portraits from the life. And yes, it is hard work, this trying to be faithful to reality in all its rawness and obscurity, to translate a diverse and elusive world rather than to invert an abstract or fictional one in the studio or study; this trying not just to see but always to look. The results, too, can make demands on the viewer or reader.
— Tim Mackintosh-Smith 2012