Back to All Events

Opening Reception | Richard Gorman, Colourist @ Christopher Cutts Gallery

  • Christopher Cutts Gallery 21 Morrow Avenue Toronto, ON M6R 2H9 Canada (map)

The Christopher Cutts Gallery is excited to present "Richard Gorman, Colourist," celebrating the Canadian painter, and his mastery of colour. The show will feature large-format pieces from the 1970s and 1980s, along with his celebrated Orpheus series and later Beta series, created in the 1990s and 2000s.

Join us in celebrating Gorman’s career at the opening reception tomorrow, October 9, from 5 to 8 pm. This exhibition will run from October 9 – November 1, 2025.

In the early years of his career, Gorman emerged with both bold abstracts and pensive landscapes, characterized by thick impasto and dramatic strokes of colour. He would move from a broad palette of over 40 pigments to extremely limited selections of colour, at one point rejecting, and then eventually returning to, black. The 1970s and 1980s large-format abstract paintings in this exhibition, spanning 10 feet in length, are sublime experiences of colour and paint, almost overwhelming in scale and energy.

The Orpheus series, title inspired by poet Rainer Maria Rilke’s Sonnets to Orpheus, sees Gorman’s colourful riverside landscapes of the 1980s distilled to a single tree on a horizon line. Using a squeegee, Gorman swiped paint across his canvases to produce these wind-swept trees in fields of colour. The early Orpheus paintings were made with contrasting colours, and the solitary tree would appear whole or fragmented, almost figure-like at times. Gorman later turned to analogous colours, so close in hue that the surface of the canvas was left with just a ghost of the iconic tree.

Gorman explored colour theory throughout his career, and he would reference Josef Albers’ thoughts on the relativity of colour —the idea that the way the eye perceives colour is not absolute, but rather dependent on surrounding colours, lighting, and context. The Beta series from the 2000s is a culmination of these explorations, featuring bursts of vibrant colours against contrasting backgrounds. He called the visual effect generated by the clash of these colours on the canvas “colour jumps.” The pigments appear to bleed into one another, seeming to vibrate and leap back and forth over the edges where they meet. The technique gives the minimal paintings a buzzing quality.

“Richard Gorman, Colourist” is the gallery’s first major Gorman exhibition since the artist’s death in 2010. It will emphasize his play with colour and his work’s ability to evoke such powerful experiences, visual and emotional, in viewers.

“Richard was a prince of a fellow. He was well-liked — loved — by everyone. He had this energy, and everyone thought they were his best friend. He was very serious about his art practice. He was dedicated. When you went to his place, you’d see these colour swatches littered all over his studio, experiments with colour in his Albers-ian way. He was able to imbue his life-force into his work. You still feel that when you’re in the presence of his work. His character really comes across in his paintings, sophisticated, elegant, and kind.”

Christopher Cutts

Previous
Previous
October 5

Closing | Milly Ristvedt: New Paintings & Early Works on Paper @ Oeno Gallery

Next
Next
October 11

Closing | Brent Rambie @ The Collectors’ Gallery of Art