Barry Burman
Barry Burman was an English figurative artist, known for his dark and often disturbing subject matter. He was an artist and teacher. He took an overdose and died aged 57.
Early life
Burman was born in Bedford in June 1943. He gained a 2/1 degree in fine art at Coventry College of Art and continued his studies for a while at the Royal College of Art. Tutors at Coventry included Michael Sandle and Ivor Abrahams both Royal Academicians. Fellow students on his course were Mike Baldwin the conceptualist artist, Fred Orton the art historian, Sue Gollifer the print miniaturist and digital artist, Phillip Wetton who went on to teach at Brown University in the United States.Employment
Despite his success as an artist, he continued to teach part-time at Mid-Warwickshire College in Leamington between 1974 and 1994.Artistic method
Burman painted with oil, acrylic, ink, and wax crayon mixed with egg yolk and vinegar on thick paper to produce a leathery surface.Shortly before his death, Burman began to work in a new medium, creating a series of Papier-mâché figures / puppets – a return in three dimensions to earlier themes.
Artistic themes
Sexuality and feminism
His early paintings are described by the critic Peter Webb as: "meticulous and controversial images which addressed his ideas on women's sexuality; provocative schoolgirls on black leather sofas; malevolent nudes clutching Victorian dolls; and threatening femme fatales grasping severed male heads". According to Webb, this led on one occasion to a physical attack from feminist critics on a BBC2 television program.Murder
In the 1980s, he created a number of images inspired by both real-life and fictional serial killers, including Jack the Ripper, Ed Gein, and Hannibal Lecter. According to Malcolm Yorke, he visited the scenes of the Whitechapel murders which "still exuded a scent of evil, or 'agony traces' as he called them".In 1991, Burman won the Hunting Group / The Observer award with his painting 'Manac Es', inspired by the Whitechapel murders as fictionalised in Iain Sinclair's first novel 'White Chappell, Scarlet Tracings'.
Street scenes
Also in the 1980s, Burman painted a number of street scenes and doorways in Whitechapel: "The area's blistered paint and cancerous brickwork... offered him visual stimuli – and nobody could suggest more menace in a wall or cracked window than Burman".Politics
In the 1980s, he tackled political themes, most notably the "chauvinism and bloody mindedness" of Margaret Thatcher's premiership and the Falklands War.Solo exhibitions
During his lifetime, Burman had nine solo exhibitions:- 1969: Coventry College of Art
- 1969: Leamington Spa Art Gallery
- 1971: University of Warwick
- 1974: Ikon Gallery, Birmingham
- 1977: Warwick Gallery
- 1982: Herbert Art Gallery, Coventry
- 1992: Nicholas Treadwell Gallery, London
- 1997: Loyal to the Nightmare, Goldmark Gallery, Uppingham
- 1999: The Pilgrim's Progress: Goldmark Gallery, Uppingham
Following his death, there have been three retrospective exhibitions:
- 2004: Barry Burman retrospective, The Royal Pump Rooms, Leamington Spa
- 2007: The Unseen Burman, Gallery 12, London
- 2008: Burman – Barry Burman 1943–2001, Knifesmith Gallery, Bristol
Other exhibitions