Tim Hobson had an architectural training, and this we can perceive as we move into his solid, coherent, alternative world. Most of his pictures feature figures in a landscape: chunky people sleepwalk through amiable sub-agrarian activities set in a terrain that looks mainly like Dorset, sometimes like Tuscany or Japan, but is essentially a country of imagination.
The landscape and the people are there to provide an interplay of shapes and surfaces: rolling hills, tumbling hunters, flora and fauna, horse haunches, profile of nose and chin, melons, the contours of a datura, the parabola of backs, buttocks, bosoms all allow the artist to compose his ballet of curves and colours. And his handling of blocked colour is rich with exciting citrines, madder and velvet browns. Sometimes it looks as if Tim Hobson has run joyous riot with a child’s geometry set; but in general it is substantial world: bonfire smoke acquires the viscosity of cotton wool; a horse pees in a triumphant arc. Some of the figures are cartoon-ish; others have a Moore - like solidity and an earthy Stanley Spencer feel – though without the heavenly dimensions. We are not allowed to get too close – as if we are looking at carp in pond or gawping at a jar of desirable boiled sweets in a 1940’s confectioner’s window. Indeed we are time-warped into some far-away but reassuring world. Part of the appeal of the pictures is that his people are passion-and-stress free. They have a tranquil Buddhist acceptance of their world.
Sometimes we note a quizzical or puzzled ‘watcher’ in the canvasses. Is it the painter himself or an outsider who is seeking too to dance to the music of the time? There seems to be a recurring motif of a vacant but slightly disdainful face that maybe echoes from the painter’s past. |