Michael Andrews

Melanie and Me Swimming

1978–9

On loan

The Hepworth Wakefield (Wakefield, UK): Hurvin Anderson: Barbershop

Artist
Michael Andrews 1928–1995
Medium
Acrylic paint on canvas
Dimensions
Support: 1829 × 1829 mm
frame: 1955 × 1959 × 77 mm
Collection
Tate
Acquisition
Purchased 1979
Reference
T02334

Display caption

Michael Andrews was one of the leading British painters of the post-war period. With Francis Bacon, Frank Auerbach, Lucian Freud and Leon Kossoff he was a member of the so-called 'School of London'. In common with them the process of painting was central to Andrews's art. Typically his paintings evolved from real elements, such as photographs of people and places, together with his memories of them. These were then developed imaginatively through engagement with the paint itself. This painting of the artist and his daughter is based on a photograph of them swimming together. Andrews developed this image so that it also refers metaphorically to Melanie's transition from family life to society.

Gallery label, August 2004

Does this text contain inaccurate information or language that you feel we should improve or change? We would like to hear from you.

Catalogue entry

T02334 MELANIE AND ME SWIMMING 1978–9

Inscribed ‘Melanie and Me Swimming 1978–9 Michael Andrews’ on stretcher
Acrylic on linen canvas, 72 × 72 (183 × 183)
Purchased from James Kirkman Ltd (Grant-in-Aid) 1979
Exh: Michael Andrews, Hayward Gallery, October 1980–January 1981 (124, repr. in colour) and subsequent tour of the Fruit Market, Edinburgh and Whitworth Art Gallery, Manchester

Melanie and Me Swimming is based on a 6 × 4 inch coloured photograph of Michael Andrews and his daughter, then aged 6, taken when they were on holiday at Glenartney Lodge, Near Comrie, Perthshire, in the summer of 1976. Andrews and his daughter Melanie often went to the pool to swim. Andrews, who was keen to make a painting of the two swimming, paid the photographer Jean Loup Cornet, a fellow houseguest, to take the photograph. The painting was executed in his Norfolk studio in 1978 and was finished in February 1979. Andrews first made a careful watercolour study (about 11 1/2 inches square) from the rectangular photograph. The photograph did not include the rocks above the pool which were painted from memory. The large picture was painted on un-primed canvas in acrylic paint applied using a spray gun as well as brushes; in the section depicting rocks strips of cloth saturated in paint were laid on the canvas and pressure applied.

Andrews considered that the scale of the figures in the painting, particularly the heads, was resolved at life size and found that it was important to adhere to this scale so that the figures should feel real to him. He did not strictly stick to the photograph when executing the watercolour and the larger painting and sees the photograph as a model or substitute object but not as an image to be copied.

Andrews painted a picture of fish, School 4, immediately before executing Melanie and Me Swimming; the latter was the first of a Holiday series of which five were planned. The second and third of this series, Alistair's Day and Peter's Day, respectively, were painted immediately after Melanie and Me Swimming.

Michael Andrews has executed only two other self-portraits, one a drawing when he was a schoolboy and a painting showing himself frontally, in 1958.

This catalogue entry was approved by the artist and based on a discussion with him on 19 February 1980. It was updated in January 2023.

Published in:
The Tate Gallery 1978-80: Illustrated Catalogue of Acquisitions, London 1981

You might like