Malcolm Arbuthnot

Malcolm Arbuthnot (1877-1967)

Malcolm Arbuthnot made small beautiful things from observed objects. Almost all of his beginnings (sketches) were of things found anywhere.

I often saw him working in his studio making minor adjustments to a line or shape; searching for the form that linked the elements of his drawing; adjusting emphases or colours, simplifying to an inevitable end.

The painting which then followed had been planned out of every unrelated space, shape, surface and colour; relationships of hard and soft edges had been calculated.

I cannot recall any purely invented work nor any emotional response to his subjects, just a fixed determination to find an answer to the problems of making a work of integrity. Now and again the answers, however considered, did not work. He knew it but kept the pieces (perhaps inspiration would come) for reference: perhaps he should have destroyed some of this cache before he died.

He was a very large man and big with it. He could be overbearing in the sureness of his own beliefs. The delicacy of his work in the hands of so large a body sometimes seemed unlikely.

However to me he was most generous with helpful criticism of my own work. I learned a great deal from him.

- a personal appreciation written by Fred Sands RI. Originally published by the Jersey Heritage Trust in their Jersey Artists series. Reproduced with kind permission of the Jersey Heritage Trust.

Artists in Jersey

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