/ 16 March 2010

‘Optimistic old sod’ Robert Hodgins dead at 89

The painter Robert Hodgins, who passed away on March 15 at the age of 89, described himself as "an optimistic old sod".

Robert Hodgins, who passed away on March 15 at the age of 89, described himself as “an optimistic old sod”, and said the process of creating art was an “auto-intoxication that allows one to live through marriages, divorces, deaths and unhappy love affairs, and come up smiling all the time”.

Hodgins was born in London in 1920. The son of a single working mother, he was put into a children’s home, where on weekends he would be farmed out to “God-awful”, religious foster parents. Living in Depression-era London, he often went to art museums “because they were free, warm and dry”, and described seeing the work of Van Gogh , and other artists, as “fragmentary, small happenings of extraordinariness in the grey block of my life”.

He moved to South Africa in 1938 at the age of 18. After serving in Kenya during World War II, he returned to London where he studied fine art at the now prestigious Goldsmiths College.

After graduating, he returned to South Africa, where he taught and and wrote art criticism for a magazine called Newscheck. Despite resigning “oh, about twelve times”, it was only in 1983, at the age of 63, that he retired and became a “full-time” artist.

In 1980 and 1981, Hodgins worked on a series of paintings based on the play Ubu Roi by Alfred Jarry. The menacing, selfish and vain character of Ubu would echo throughout his career in many of his best-known works, either as himself, or in works that depicted imposing, threatening characters in business suits. Hodgins stated in his ‘interview with himself” in the biographical retrospective Robert Hodgins (Tafelburg) that “When I finally got around to reading Ubu Roi, and there were Goering, Nero, Idi Amin — the evil clown, the laughable monster. It released a flood of images, the colours, shapes, distortions of which fitted me.”

His “late start” meant that, despite his advancing years, Hodgins considered himself to be “young as an artist”. He continued to experiment with subject, medium and technique, and challenged himself to find new ways to depict reality through metaphor and abstraction, when many artists of similar age had settled into a style of that brought critical (and financial) reward. As a result, his art remained relevant, and exhibitions always offered something new, rather than falling into predictable retrospectives that become so common when artists reach a certain point in their artistic life.


A vain young man and three spectators

An icon of the recent history of South African art, Hodgins had taken part in a number of important solo and group exhibitions, notably collaborating with William Kentridge and Deborah Bell in Hogarth in Johannesburg (1987) and The Little Morals Series (1991).

He was well known for his humour and enthusiastic approach to art-making. Art Print SA quotes him as saying “Before you know where you are, you’re already thinking about the next work, and you could live to be 300. Paintings can be one-night stands or lifetime love-affairs — you never know until you get cracking”.