GOFFA’S KNOLL
Some time in the spring of 1977, having moved to
Cambridgeshire from London ,
I was painting a landscape that had in the distance a small hill, covered with
trees.
In the
foreground of sweeping fields of young cereal growth that flowed up to the
hill, stood a hide, made of straw bales. This hide was plainly made for a
marksman whose job it was not only to scare off the pigeons from eating young
shoots in the field, but also to bag as many as possible for the pot or sale.
There was
no sign of anyone in situ. I was quite alone in this expansive landscape. It
was the way that I liked to paint.
I was using
oil paint that I ground myself, applying it to paper that I had previously
primed with a thin coating of beeswax. Knowing the wherewithal of my craft, in
the way of paint, brushes and paper, was all-important to me. With complete
knowledge of my equipment and how to use it meant that only the subject matter
was of concern.
Just the hum from a distant road
and the sound of a skylark disturbed the silence.
A couple of hares appeared and
started to engage in their ritual of springtime sparring. I added them to the
scene.
I had been
sitting on the grass overlooking this idyllic landscape for some time, painting
away, when I was very surprised to see, in centre stage as it were, a little
smoke rise from the straw hide, to be followed almost immediately by flames.
The construction had self-ignited right in front of me. In a short time there
was nothing left of it except for a patch of black, smouldering straw.
There was
still no one about, and certainly no body, or remains of one, where the hide
had stood. It was quite disturbing. Moreover, the farmer might happen to pass
by and enquire if I had been responsible for this arson attack on his straw
hide.
The
marksman’s cover, set in the rolling sward, had been the focal part of my
picture, with the tree-clad hill and sky behind. Now, even the hares had
departed. So I packed my things away and returned home.
What was
this all about?
I returned
a few days later to look at the scene once more. It now somehow seemed more
magical than before.
I made
enquiries locally to learn that the hill was called Goffa’s Knoll and that in
an ancient age the local chieftain or king, called Goffa, had been surrounded
by his enemies and that after a bloody battle he, his family, and all his men
had been slaughtered.
Was I being
told something by being witness to this fiery manifestation?
I returned
to the same spot several times more and came to believe that Goffa’s soul, or
spirit, or whatever, was trapped in his knoll and needed desperately to be
released from its earthly bonds.
So I set
about doing just that in the form of a series of paintings, combining his
release in the light and purity of East Anglian landscape with the seediness of
London living.
That was
how I came to contrive Goffa’s apotheosis – in paintings shown at a most
successful one-man exhibition in the Art Gallery of Cambridge Central Library
in 1977.
Christopher Neve, Art Critic for “Country Life”, wrote: With
its mounds, clumps, moods and fecundity, it persists in the sexual analogy of
the monotypes but with a sense of timelessness. In the largest works here, most
memorably, the painter has chosen to release the energy of Goffa’s Knoll, like
lancing a boil. A half-glimpsed figure, sometimes still bound and shrouded,
escapes upwards, from tumulus to cumulus. Menacing traffic threatens to run out
of the frame. Ubiquitous hares box and run. Bales of straw stand about like
stone circles. For me, to an astonishing degree, these paintings have the power
to suggest how man’s used landscape mysteriously survives him, marking his
place.