Philip Surrey
Galerie Walter Klinkhoff
Philip Surrey
Grosvenor & Sherbrooke, the Pink Umbrella, 1972
1910-1990
$40,000
Inscriptions
signed, 'Surrey' (lower right)Provenance
Continental Gallery, Montreal as Grosvenor Avenue at Sherbrooke Street, WestmountAcquired from the above, private collection, Montreal, September 6, 1985
Expositions
Galerie Walter Klinkhoff, Montreal, Philip Surrey Retrospective Exhibition, September 18-October 2, 2004, no. 34.
“At present we are going through not the atomic age (at least as long as each person does not have his own reactor!) but certainly the automobile age.” [1], Philip Surrey said to Gilles Daigneault in 1979, in a rare interview. The Expressionionism of Philip Surrey became the title of his contribution.
Daigneault suggests that Surrey’s cars sometimes become, “powerful images symbolic of the human condition” [2].... “which plastically condemn the stupid aggressiveness of the male’”[3]. With the aforementioned in mind, and combined with Robert Ayre’s suggestion that, “…apprehension and fear lurk in the threatening shadows...")[4], in this painting the cars, the evening illuminated by artificial light, the wet pavement, the light standard showing yellow and a young lady walking alone reflects a number of Surrey’s anxieties.
Surrey’s anxieties about the threatening nature of cars, trucks and buses we have seen in many of his works dating back to the late 1940s. In the year 2022, reports of pedestrians being struck by vehicles areis in the news daily. The aggressiveness is not confined to that of the male species. I am a pedestrian, who like Philip Surrey, walks to and from the office daily. It is commonplace that both men and women driving cars that bear names LX 350, GLE 450, Diablo, Raptor, Gladiator, Defender appropriate to those of combat aircraft (see F-15, F-16, JAS 39, SU-27, MiG 29) sail through the stop sign outside our home, driven by heavily caffeinated men and women anxiously driving their child to one or another of the schools in our neighborhood. That DEFENDER, “the toughest Land Rover ever”, is increasingly popular. MotorTrend ranked it “victorious” in their 2021 SUV of the year competition, tests which included “having trekked one across Africa”. (https://www.motortrend.com/features/land-rover-defender-off-road-suv-history-in-photos/)
In my opinion this is hardly a requirement to carpool 6 year old Lizzy and her friends to Westmount’s Miss Edgar and Miss Cramp's School for Girls. My wife, Helen, and I walk a short block to the park regularly on weekends with our young grandchildren.
Alan Klinkhoff
—
Footnotes:
[1] Gilles Daigneault, "The expressionism of Philip Surrey", Texts in English, Vie des Arts, Vol 24, No. 96, Fall 1979, p. 101.
[2] Ibid.
[3] Ibid.
[4] Ibid.
Daigneault suggests that Surrey’s cars sometimes become, “powerful images symbolic of the human condition” [2].... “which plastically condemn the stupid aggressiveness of the male’”[3]. With the aforementioned in mind, and combined with Robert Ayre’s suggestion that, “…apprehension and fear lurk in the threatening shadows...")[4], in this painting the cars, the evening illuminated by artificial light, the wet pavement, the light standard showing yellow and a young lady walking alone reflects a number of Surrey’s anxieties.
Surrey’s anxieties about the threatening nature of cars, trucks and buses we have seen in many of his works dating back to the late 1940s. In the year 2022, reports of pedestrians being struck by vehicles areis in the news daily. The aggressiveness is not confined to that of the male species. I am a pedestrian, who like Philip Surrey, walks to and from the office daily. It is commonplace that both men and women driving cars that bear names LX 350, GLE 450, Diablo, Raptor, Gladiator, Defender appropriate to those of combat aircraft (see F-15, F-16, JAS 39, SU-27, MiG 29) sail through the stop sign outside our home, driven by heavily caffeinated men and women anxiously driving their child to one or another of the schools in our neighborhood. That DEFENDER, “the toughest Land Rover ever”, is increasingly popular. MotorTrend ranked it “victorious” in their 2021 SUV of the year competition, tests which included “having trekked one across Africa”. (https://www.motortrend.com/features/land-rover-defender-off-road-suv-history-in-photos/)
In my opinion this is hardly a requirement to carpool 6 year old Lizzy and her friends to Westmount’s Miss Edgar and Miss Cramp's School for Girls. My wife, Helen, and I walk a short block to the park regularly on weekends with our young grandchildren.
Alan Klinkhoff
—
Footnotes:
[1] Gilles Daigneault, "The expressionism of Philip Surrey", Texts in English, Vie des Arts, Vol 24, No. 96, Fall 1979, p. 101.
[2] Ibid.
[3] Ibid.
[4] Ibid.