The Temptations of Solitude:
the Art of Clive Hicks–Jenkins


The Man Who Lived in a Tree

"The Man Who Lived in a Tree"
from The Temptations of Solitude series

In the collection of Christ Church Picture Gallery in Oxford are nine fragments of a Tuscan altarpiece depicting the Lives of the Desert Fathers, painted by an unknown artist in the mid fifteenth century. The panels were a visual narrative, a Biblia Pauperum, with which to teach the stories of the medieval church. In the early nineteenth century they were cut up and dispersed. All of the fragments have been identified, in collections at the Kunsthaus in Zürich, Yale University, and the National Gallery of Scotland. The group at Christ Church is the largest.

Clive Hicks–Jenkins has made a contemporary response to the Christ Church fragments in the form of a sequence of eight paintings titled The Temptations of Solitude, and a series of associated studies. Just as the original artist depicted the desert as the Tuscan landscape familiar to him, Clive has set his paintings in his own time and place, drawing imagery from the landscapes and buildings of post–industrial Wales. The stories of men who entered the wilderness in search of enlightenment and the mortification of the flesh are the inspiration for a spiritual, personal and poetic dialogue over more than five centuries.



A Vision of Angels Ascending

"A Vision of Angels Ascending"
from Prepatory Works for The Temptation of Solitude



Comfort of Angels Ascending

"Comfort of Angels Ascending"
from The Temptations of Solitude series

Two Figures for an Annunciation

"Two Figures for an Annunciation"
from Prepatory Works for
The Temptation of Solitude



Demon

"Demon"
from Prepatory Works for
The Temptation of Solitude



To see the full Temptations of Solitudes series and other works by Clive Hicks–Jenkins, please visit the artist’s website.

The images on these pages are copyright © by Clive Hicks–Jenkins and may not be reproduced in any form without the artist’s written permission.




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