Colin Figue, an
outstanding artist of international repute who has lived in the Algarve
for nearly four decades, is soon to hold his first public exhibition here since
1989.
While best known
for large abstract sculptures in marble, his month-long exhibition opening 20th
July in the Galeria Santo António, Monchique, will feature paintings and welded
iron sculptures.
It was while
studying at the School of Sculpture in the Royal Academy of Art in London in the 1960s that
Figue began to feel a sense of vocation and what sculpture could be.
He describes it
now as “the feeling that life was infinitely more meaningful and profound than
it appeared on the surface, that everything was somehow connected, the inner
space of the mind, dream and reflection fusing with the world at large and the
boundless mystery of space and time.
“Men were landing
on the moon and challenging our preconceptions. It seemed that making sculpture
could be like trying to split the atom, a continual voyage of exploration and
discovery. I bought a magnifying glass and started to look more closely at
things and to discover forgotten links already written in stone.”
Private patronage
allowed him to travel, study and create in Spain
and Brazil as well in England .
Through his retired parents who were then living in the Algarve , he discovered the quality
of light and other special features still so appreciated by artists here today.
His love of
southern Portugal
was enhanced in 1974 when the already well-established Irish painter and author
Patrick Swift of Porches Pottery fame encouraged him to come and work here.
During many of his
post-Royal Academy adventures, Figue was accompanied by his girlfriend, later his
wife, Mort, a painter and ceramic artist. In 1977 and again in 1979, the
British Council awarded them both scholarships that gave the opportunity of
working in the marble quarries of the Alentejo. It was there that he produced
his first large-scale sculptures.
Since setting up
home and studio near Carvoeiro he has interspersed long periods of secluded creativity
with trips abroad to explore foreign cultures and to participate in
international symposiums in places as diverse as China, Guatemala, Dubai,
Turkey, Korea, Morocco and Germany. He is represented with sculptures in public
collections in countries such as Belize ,
France , Italy , Slovakia ,
Japan , Taiwan , India
and Lebanon .
Meeting other artists
abroad has “mitigated the fact that I chose the edge of Europe
as my home base. It has taken me out of cultural isolation,” he says.
“Harmonious, timeless, perfect, the sculptures
of Colin Figue are rooted in the classical tradition,” wrote the English
painter Richard Caston in previewing a retrospective exhibition of his work at
the British Council in Lisbon
in 1994. Caston described Figue, who has the distinction of being an elected
member of the Royal Society of British Sculptors, as “first and foremost a
carver of stone, one of the finest working today.”
A very different
side of his work will be on show in Monchique. “A few of the paintings
date back to the mid-nineties and were fired up by my first visit to India
in 1995,” he says. “I was overwhelmed by the brilliance of light and colour
there and the way they are used in acts of celebration and
devotion. Back in my studio I searched for a palette and began to experiment
with oils and acrylics and a mix of media.
“The iron pieces
are from 2004. In contrast to my usual choice of stone as material for sculpture,
these works are like three dimensional drawings, projections into space that
cast changing shadows suggesting cyclic motion and the passage of time.”
Having turned 70
this year, Figue says he is slowing down in some respects. “I am spending more
time painting, but with the same sense of purpose and conviction and wonder at
the universe we inhabit that I felt as a student.”
* The Galeria Santo
António is opposite the post office and near the market in central Monchique. The exhibition opens at 8.0pm on 20th July. It
will run until 21st August, Tuesdays to Sundays 10.0am-12.20pm, 3.30pm-7.0pm. The iron
sculptures will remain on show until 20th October.
Anyone wishing to
visit Figue’s studio and sculpture garden at Chamuscas, Estrada de Benagil,
Lagoa, can either drop by with the chance of finding him at home, or call to
make an appointment: 282 341628.