October 2001 Show
Major exhibition and sale of
new original oil paintings by
Phil Buytendorp
Small paintings
(5 x 7 and 8 x 10)
Medium paintings
(16 x 20 to 20 x 24)
Large paintings
(24 x 36 and larger)
Phil Buytendorp was born in Manitoba of Dutch parents and belongs to several generations of respected artists. He is an accomplished outdoorsman with a deep appreciation and love of the natural environment. Phil obtained an apprenticeship in art under his father and his work takes great inspiration from the Group of Seven. For the past 14 years, Phil has lived in British Columbia, spending as much time as he can on the West Coast, where he is often inspired by the constantly changing moods of ocean and sky. He also explores other themes. For example, this show includes a small but exciting selection of work from his very recent painting trip to Algonquin Park in Ontario.
Articles:
Philip Buytendorp: Third Generation Artist, by Richard Waugh, from Magazin Art
Article by Richard Waugh
Magazin Art (Fall 2001)
Courtesy of the publisher
Philip Buytendorp: Third Generation Artist
When describing our experiences with nature, most of us would have to admit that our encounters with the environment consist primarily of such detached and superficial activities as pulling the car off the highway long enough to take photographs of wildlife rummaging for food or of spectacular landscapes. Philip Buytendorp is not most of us. His exaggerated depictions of moody West Coast landscapes, brooding southern Alberta Foothills and scenes from Algonquin Park, resplendent with the brilliant and changing colours of autumn, are representations of an artist who expresses with the uncanny vividness of one who is intimately familiar with the shapes and forms of our natural environment.
Buytendorp’s one-man show at the White Rock Gallery in White Rock, British Columbia on October 19 will feature over 50 new paintings (ranging in size from 5 x 7 board panels to 40 x 60 inches canvasses) that represent his experiences as an avid outdoorsman and rugged adventurer prone to traversing rivers and streams, navigating the Southern Inside Passage and hiking along abandoned wilderness trails and logging roads in search of his subject matter.
Philip Buytendorp was born in Brandon, Manitoba in 1961 into a family of artists. His mother is a potter and his father George is a renowned Dutch-born Canadian painter and fine art restorer. Like Philip’s grandfather, George Buytendorp also was educated and received his formal artistic training at the Academy of Fine Arts and Related Sciences in The Hague, Netherlands. George Buytendorp immigrated to Canada in 1951, settled in Southern Manitoba and began working immediately as an artist and a teacher. Philip’s childhood memories are filled with fond recollections of weekend outings with his father to sketch and paint the landscapes of the southern Manitoba countryside. According to Buytendorp, “Having grown up in a creative family, support and encouragement were plentiful. Having had access to a considerable library of art literature and images at home, and regularly attending exhibitions further added to the stewing pot of my inspiration.”
Buytendorp obtained his formal training in art theory at the Brandon Arts Centre in 1978-1979. Although he spent most of the next 20 years in various construction trades — mostly as a cement finisher — he found time to sketch scenes from the Southern Alberta Foothills when he lived in Calgary in the early 1980s. However, it was not until he moved to the Fraser Valley (Abbotsford) in 1987 that Buytendorp began painting in earnest under his father’s tutelage. George Buytendorp’s knowledge and experience were his son’s base for “jumping off” into the world of art, where he continues to weave through his own development as an artist.
After Buytendorp moved to Piers Island in the Southern Gulf Islands in 1997, he began to paint coastal landscapes in oils from the sketches and photos of his numerous boat trips through the Southern Inside Passage. “I love water because I love the perspective of exposed rugged rock from my boat or canoe,” he says. “The shoreline is not composed of randomly scattered pieces of rock, but rather beautiful banks of submerged natural masonry that demonstrate how the crust of the earth fits together. There is a certain kind of music to that.” He pauses for a moment, as if sensing the need to elaborate on his poetic description, “Beauty doesn’t always hit you on the forehead, you know; sometimes you have to go looking for it.”
Buytendorp made the decision to devote himself to painting as a full-time occupation in 1997, when, he says “A lifetime of experiences while exploring the wilderness resurfaced at my wife’s bidding. An opportunity availed itself while living on Piers Island on Canada’s West Coast, to present some of my recent work to a local gallery. Sales were immediate and regular. Within two years, three galleries were carrying my work with excellent recognition.”
He moved back to the Fraser Valley (this time to Chilliwack) in 1999, where he and his father (now 79) still paint together at his studio once a week and where he continues to derive inspiration from the numerous sketches and panels from his wilderness experiences.
While Buytendorp is understandably reluctant to settle into an established label from himself so early in his career, he agrees that his style is influenced by Impressionism and Expressionism. His landscapes, for example, demonstrate a brilliant use of colour and line to depict exaggerated contours, while his use of colour and tone also signify the shape and form of a distorted and exaggerated style.
Moreover, he makes broad use of colour, shape and light to set the mood for his paintings, and in capturing the natural play of light and colours he is able to paint movement and the fleeting moment. Equally important are the powerful, dramatic palette knife and brush strokes that give a visceral muscularity to the shapes and forms — brawny trees, gloomy skies, jagged shorelines and wind-stirred waters — that comprise his subject matter.
Along with his father, Buytendorp continues to be influenced most by Group of Seven artists Tom Thomson and A.Y. Jackson, as well as Carl Rungius, the German-born American painter of wildlife and landscapes. For example, Buytendorp sees a truthfulness and beauty — a beauty of colour feeling and emotion — in Thomson’s paintings and admires the “gall” Thomson displayed in his use of colour and in his completely honest and straightforward reproduction of what he saw in the moment. He credits Jackson, on the other hand, as the inspiration for helping him to “loosen up,” while Rungius, he says “was a master at handling the delicacies of colour while maintaining the strength of his bold brushstrokes.” In Buytendorp’s words, “There exists a challenge in achieving a healthy balance between artistic freedom and technical control. I believe this to be of paramount importance in the artist’s mind. Freedom allows for creativity and emotion in the rendering of a piece, but applied control keeps communication lines open between artist and viewer.”
Painting allows Buytendorp to share a particular moment with the viewer and to communicate through vivid detail an explicit idea and emotion. “Perhaps I could be called emotional as a portrayer, though [I’m] not usually described as an emotional person.” He points to the 5 x 7 and 8 x 10 inch panels, which, he says, capture most honestly what he is feeling at the moment he is painting them.
They demand a quick decision in composition, an ability either to ignore or summarize much of the detail and a skilful use of colour applied in such a way that must be truthful, both to the natural environment and the mood of his experience.
“Painting is a recreation of what I felt when I saw it,” he says, “and the changing moods of my paintings reflect what is happening outside. They are very weather dependent. The same landscape appears completely different depending on the weather, the season and the time of day.”
Philip Buytendorp lives in Chilliwack, British Columbia, with his wife Jacquie and their two children, Kirsten and Eric. His work is exhibited in galleries in White Rock, the Fraser Valley and on Vancouver Island and in private collections across North America.
Reaching for the Sky, by Alex Browne, from the Peace Arch News
Article by Alex Browne
Peace Arch News (Oct. 13, 2001)
Courtesy of the publisher
Reaching for the Sky: Buytendorp’s latest embraces expected, and unexpected
Some revel in landscapes that are tranquil and predictable. Others prefer scenes that provide evocative stimulus.
It’s clearly the latter breed of collector that has kept painter Phil Buytendorp busy since he decided to jettison the building trades and concentrate on his art full-time in 1997.
Many of Buytendorp’s best landscapes seem to exist on the edge of a storm, where wind whips trees and sends clouds scudding across the skies to form almost surreal shapes and vistas.
And while the paintings in Buytendorp’s upcoming one-man show at White Rock Gallery feature some tranquil scenes and atypical subject matter, he’s quick to admit he enjoys the play of light and shade that is only found painting outside on blustery days.
“The skies can be crucial,” he said.
“If the sky changes, the light changes, and if the light changes you have a different subject on your hands.
“The sky has got a whole life of its own — it can set the mood but it doesn’t have to be a focal point, it doesn’t have to take away from the solidarity of the foreground.
“When you get out there in nature it can be a bit of a rollercoaster in what you see. You can have the foreboding of a cloud, or the magnificence of the sun breaking through. They can send you flying, emotionally.”
Buytendorp said his self-imposed discipline is to paint one thing at a time, to keep the ultimate statement simple.
“It’s knowing when a statement’s been made — the quiet is every bit as important as the music. It’s like Mozart’s Piano Concerto No. 24 — it’s perfect as it is. Any more music or instrumentation on top of it would be only noise.
“Not, mind you, that I’m comparing myself to Mozart,” he said, smiling.
Going through the paintings for his show, the genial Buytendorp throws out place names for his subjects. Some favourites are Tofino and Ucluelet, the Inside Passage and Gulf Islands and rough country at the north end of Stave Lake.
“Sometimes I find that where they’ve logged, there is some beauty there — you begin to see the lay of the land.”
Biggest departure in terms of subject matter (if not mood) are scenes he painted from a recent two-week trip to Algonquin Park in Ontario, stamping ground of the famed Group of Seven.
As a child, Buytendorp visited the park several times with his father George, with whom he still paints (he’s a third generation artist: both his father and grandfather were trained at the Academy of Fine Arts in the Hague, Netherlands).
“I love the work of the Group of Seven and I wanted to see the park again myself through the eyes of an artist,” he said.
“I wanted a lack of fear in the application of colours, and being there helps.”
Another feature, and departure, of the upcoming show is the inclusion of small panel paintings — including the first 5×7 pieces by Buytendorp offered for sale.
Each an exquisite small-scale statement incorporating his eye for composition and colour, the panels are actually an easier medium for Buytendorp to work with.
“The smaller size is helpful because I like to paint where there is rain, bugs and wind. The panels are transportable and I can log the colours pretty quickly onto them.
“When you get back to the studio you tend to settle down more. You’re not as daring, you wouldn’t put this colour next to that colour.
“Usually I clamp the panels to the easel — a canvas becomes like a kite in the wind.”
“Sometimes I finish the panels as little paintings; sometimes I throw them into the fireplace. Sometimes I work them into a large painting.”
Part of the challenge with larger paintings is keeping them as loose as smaller, on-site works.
“For something like that to succeed, you really have to have the small panel as a reference.”
The show holds plenty of evidence of Buytendorp challenging himself in other directions.
Some of his landscapes are stylized to emphasize mood and movement and others an almost mythic sense of the terrain. Others are relatively placid scenes, including softer snowscapes and autumnal studies and some close-up studies of old barns.
There are also florals and paintings employing palette knife.
“I like the ability to leave colours un-mixed. In one knife-stroke you can have three or four different colours at the same time.
“Some of the paintings suit the knife better; some paintings I sit and say ‘I want to play with the knife again’.
“Variety was something I was shooting for with this show, and I’m pretty happy with it. I was looking forward to coming in before the show and seeing all the work again.”