|
VICTOR MORGAN
Prin iawn yw pobl wir gyntefig ac mae dod o hyd iddynt fel chwilio
am aur. Nid oes brinder pyritau a sorod ond cier'' y gwythiennau mwyaf trwchus ymhlith y ygenhenlaeth a aned cyn 1914. Fe gofir y genhedlaeth hon am ei siared plaen a'i llawysgrfen gain. Treuliasant eu bywyidau mewn gweithfeydd dur a bythod signal, yn gwneud gwaith oedd islaw eu gallu.Llwyddodd rhai ohonynt ar derfyn oe i fynnegi eu hunain yn effeithiol drwy beintio.
Y mae Victor Morgan, serch hynny, yn perthyn i genhedlaeth iau, ac y mae felly yn ffenomen fwy prin
--fe'i ganed ym 1927. Nid yw'n gwrthwynebu'r disgrifiad 'cyntefig er fod yn term yn un annigonol a ddefnyddir yn nawddoglyd ar brydiau. Y mae'n perthyn i'r dosbarth hwnnw beintwyr sy'n ymgolli'n
llwyr yn y testun--a dyma gyfrinach eu ffurfiau naturiol a natur rydd a didwyll eu gwaith.
Mae ganddynt apel rhamantaidd, a meddyliwn amdanynt fel rhai na flasodd ffrwyth gwaharddedig pren
gwybodaeth artistig, ac sy'n trin eu gerddi paradwysaidd, na allwn ni eu
gweld ond o'r tu allan.
Gwelais ei waith am y tro cyntaf
mewn arddangosfa gymysg o waeth arlunwyr llleol yn orial gelf Casnewydd--llong awyr o'r 1930au yn hofran dros doeau tai yng ngwent. Y mae'r llun hwn yn nodweddiadol o ymgais gyffredin ymhlin arlunwyr cyntefig i geisio darlunio pethau yn union fel y maent. Ymhen amser cefais y pleser mawr o ymweld a^'i gartref a darganfod muriau a oedd yn llawn o amrywiaeth o luniau bywiog dros ben Y mae ei oeuvre yn
perthyn i sawl categori: y lluniau o hen bethau a gofir yw'r rhai mwyaf llwyddiannus yn fy nhyb i. Enghraifft drawiadol yn'r olygfa diwrnod-golch o'r 1940au. Canolbwyntir cymaint ar bobl ag ar y gwrthrychau o'u cwmpas.
Y wyler trawiadol sy'n chwydu ager, y bath
tun gyda'r bwrdd golchi a'r byncer glo-- maent i gyd yn foel a phlaen ond gyda lliw llon drwy'r cyfan. Fe ddylwn grybwyll enghreifftiau eraill fel y 'stemar'(yng enghasgliad nodedig M. Athanas Poulev o baris) wedi ei angori ar afon Wysg a sawl delwedd rymus arall o longau gyda dwr
gloyw a disglair yn eu hamgylchynu bob tro, yn dwyn i gof argraffiadau cyntaf plentyndod o'r mo^r.
Ymhlith ei waith cynharaf ceir copi o'r
Wagen Wair'-- nad yw'n ystrydeb o bell ffordd gyda'i awyr hyfryd sy'n llawn arbrofi diddorol.
Mae ganddo ymdeimlad cryf o gerflunwaith a chynhyrchodd sawl gwaith mewn metal wedi ei weldio (welder yn
Llanwern ydyw wrth ei waith). Hoffais y darnu llai-- crancod a chreaduriaid bychain eraill, sy'n swmpus yn y llaw ac, fel
pob cerflunwaith da yn ddiddorol o bob ongl.
Gwedd arall ar el waith amryiol yw
ei gydwybod cymdeithasol.
Mae'r gweithiau cyforiog hyn ar ffurf caricatur ac ynargoffa dyn o waith Gearge Gros ar brydiau.
gellid ofni fod Victor yn y fan hon, ond dew'r
datblygiad newydd yn rhwydd iddo ac ni ddylanwadwyd
ar ei ymwybyddiaeth o ffurf.
Dylem gofi mae'n debyg mai peth cymharol yw'r nodwedd naif brin,ac fel pawb arall mae ef yn tyfu'n llai naif i ryw raddau.
Mae'n barod iawn i esbonio'r symbolaeth gymhleth yn y darluniau hyn.
mae'n symbolaeth Garnol Oesol yn ei gymhlethdod,ac ynrhoi inni ddywediadau,credoau,gobeithion ac ofnau pobl gyffredin mewn cyfrwng gweledol.
Rhag i'm sylwadau i fy hun ymddangos ynnawddoglyd diweddaf drewy awgrymu ein bod oll yngyntefig i ryw raddau neu'i gilydd ac os llwyddwn i gynhyrchu unrhywbeth o werth,ei hanfod wedi'r cyfan yw gwedd gyntefig ein gwaith.
Roy Powell.
|
 Click image to return homeArticle
1986 Link Magazine
A.A.D.W. REVIEW from times past 1986 by artist Roy Powell Teacher and scholar working in Brecon.
REVIEW OF PAST EXIBITION of paintings
by
VICTOR
MORGAN
entitled the First Ten Years' was at
Llantarnam Grange Art Center,
Cwmbran from the 12th to the 24th of May 1986.
With The Support of Welsh Arts Council
Genuine Primitives are few and far
between and searching them out is like
prospecting for gold. There is never any
shortage of pyrites and dross but the
thickest seams are to be found among
the generations before 1914. we
remember that generation for its plain
speech and beautiful handwriting. They
spent their lives under-achieving in
steelworks and signal boxes and few of
them found expression in painting in later life.
Victor Morgan how ever is of a later
generation and there for a rarer
phenomenon-born in 1927. He has no
objection to his style being refered to as
primitive' despite the inadequacy of this
term and it's patronising overtones. He
belongs to that category of painters
whose total absorption in their subject
matter is the secret of their
unselfconscious forms and the
uninhibited and spontaneous nature of
their work. They still have a romantic
appeal for us, and we think of them
somehow as not having tasted of the
forbidden fruit of the artistic tree of
knowledge and cultivating their own
paradise gardens which we can only
view from outside.
I first caught sight of his work at the
mixed show of local painters at
Newport Art gallery-an airship of the
1930s drifting over rooftops in Gwent.
This picture typifies a common aim
among primitive painters in striving to
catch things exactly as they were
physically and socially I had
the great pleasure of visiting his home
and found it wall-to-ceiling with a
variety of extremely lively pictures.
His oeuvre falls into various
ategories; the pictures from long-past
memory are for me the most successful.
A striking example is the washing-day
scene of the 1940s.He shows the same
involvement in the human figure as in
the objects which surround them.
The formidable boiler belching steam,
a tin bath with wash board and coal
bunker-stark and earthy but with a
pervading joyous color. I should
mention other excellent examples such
as the paddle steamer (in the notable
collection of M.Athanas Pouley of Paris)
tied up in the River Usk and several
other powerful images of ships. always
surrounded with bright and glittering
water which brings back one's first
childhood sensations of the sea.
Among his earliest work is a copy of
the 'Hay Wain' which is anything but a
beginner's cliché' with its delightful sky,
full of fascinating improvisations.
He has a strong sculptural sense and
has produced a number of pieces in
welded metal (he is a welder
at LLanwern by trade). I found the smaller
pieces the most attractive-crabs and
other small creatures, heavy to hold and
like all good sculpture, equally
interesting which ever they are
tilted.
Another facet of his varied work
reveals his social conscience. These
works are crowded with caricatured and
reminiscent at times of work of
George Grosz: One might be
Apprehensive here that Victor might be
becoming a little 'artistic' here but he
takes the new direction with ease and
his sense of form remains untainted.
I suppose that we must remember that
this cherished Naive quality is a relative
term and like everyone else he is
evolving towards the less naive to some
degree. He is only too willing to explain
the complicated symbolism in these
paintings: medieval in its complexity.
It gives us in visual terms the sayings,
beliefs, hopes and fears of ordinary
people.
In case my remarks themselves seem
patronising I shall end by suggesting
that we are all primitives to some degree
and if we succeed in producing anything
of value, its essence is after all the
primitive aspect of our work.
Roy Powell
1986 Link Magazine
A.A.D.W.

|