Born in Fife, William Gear studied at Edinburgh College of Art from 1932, where teachers included SJ Peploe, and Wilhelmina Barns-Graham was among his peers. Upon graduating, he won a travelling scholarship, and studied under Fernand Léger in Paris. His early works depict bizarre structures in barren, post-apocalyptic landscapes, examples of which were shown in the first exhibition in Scotland of Surrealist art, in 1939. Called up in 1940, Gear met Merlyn Evans en-route to the Middle East, and Karl Otto Götz in Germany. He continued painting, staging solo exhibitions in Florence (1944) and Hamburg (1947). From 1945-47, Gear travelled to Germany (working as a Monuments Man), and from 1947-50, settled in Paris, befriending Jean-Michel Atlan, Alan Davie, Hans Hartung and Pierre Soulages, among others. His work grew more abstract, with irrational shapes and a bold palette, which prompted his friend Stephen Gilbert to introduce Gear to CoBrA, allowing him to exhibit in important early CoBrA shows in Copenhagen and in Amsterdam, in 1949. Later that year, Gear’s paintings were recommended to Betty Parsons, a prominent New York dealer and champion of Modernism, who arranged for a joint-exhibition with Jackson Pollock. This was the first time his work was shown in America, and Gear was the only non-American who Pollock shared an exhibition with. However, the New York show failed to launch Gear in America.

 

In the summer of 1950, Gear stayed in Doëlan, in south Finistère, drawing and painting marine subjects. Later that year, he moved to Buckinghamshire with his new wife, where the abstracted fall of light glimpsed through tangled trees manifested itself in large, painterly canvases. A famous example is Autumn Landscape, painted for the 1951 Festival of Britain. Arts Council judges awarded it a prize of £500, but its abstract nature, and the fact it received government money as part of the prize, caused great controversy. The press and public (as well as artists, including Laura Knight) were outraged; the Daily Mail ran the story as front-page news, and a large reproduction of the painting appeared in the Daily Telegraph. The letter-pages of the newspapers were filled for the next month with angry responses, and the painting was even discussed in Parliament, on 3 May. It provoked such an outcry that this was the only prize-winning painting not to enter a public collection by the end of the year. 

 

Undeterred, Gear pioneered the technique of silkscreen, and was one of the first British artists to exhibit these prints as artworks, in a mixed show at the Redfern Gallery in 1953. He also represented Britain at the 1952 São Paulo Bienale; shared exhibitions with Ivon Hitchens in London (1954) and with Sandra Blow in New York (1957); while examples of his work featured in important British Council touring shows, including Seven British Artists, in 1959. In 1958, Gear was appointed curator of Towner Art Gallery in Eastbourne. However, the local community was resistant to the Modernist art championed by Gear, and every purchase had to overcome fierce opposition. He later said of this time that "I won the battle, I was a casualty if you like, but I won the battle". In 1960, two paintings by Gear were included in the Royal Academy Summer Exhibition - the first abstract works ever to be shown at the Academy, and which were met with much derision in the press. At the 1962 Summer Exhibition, his submissions were rejected by the RA Hanging Committee, prompting the sculptor FE McWilliam to resign in protest.

 

Depressed by the constant opposition to his purchases, Gear left Eastbourne in 1964, and started teaching at Birmingham College of Arts and Crafts (until 1975), where his students included Brendan Neiland. In this period, Gear painted dynamic, diagonal black armatures against vibrant detonations of colour, perfecting a new, thrilling evocation of light pulsing through foliage. From the 1970s onwards, the armatures no longer symbolised tree trunks, but jagged and irregular metal off-cuts, though the harsh forms were often complemented by warm tasches of colour. These years also saw him painting softer, more rounded shapes in amongst the hard edges. He was made a Senior Royal Academician aged eighty, some three decades after first exhibiting at the RA. In February 1997, the Redfern Gallery’s Golden Jubilee Exhibition, celebrating fifty years of Gear’s output, became a memorial show, with Gear having died just two days after the opening. For his centenary year, a major retrospective was staged at Towner, and toured to City Art Centre, Edinburgh, during 2015-16. It received widespread critical acclaim. 

 

William Gear's estate is represented by the Redfern Gallery. 

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William Gear RA

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