Irina Baronova (handing on the baton)
by Jenny Sages
image - Art Gallery of New South Wales.
I recently watched a fantastic documentary about Australian Artist Jenny
Sages, Jenny Sages - Paths to Portraiture, on ABC
iview. I don't think I have seen Sages' work before so it was a revelation.
Her portraits in particular just glow from the canvas. In
describing her own response to Sages' portrait of her, writer Helen Garner
spoke of the portrait as revealing something akin to a 'psychic connection'
between the artist and the subject. Sages scratches and scours into the
canvas as she builds up the painting - so much detail on the surface of the
work, which makes the sheer scale of her portraits all the more impressive. The
documentary was extremely moving and beautifully made, revealing much about the
artist and her life and how she choses to make her work. I was deeply
inspired by this woman who found her real creative path at the age of 50, after
a career as an illustrator and raising a family. The subjects of her portraits
are people she has a close connection with or respect for and this may be the
reason why these works are so compelling. Her self portraits are intense
and revealing and the portrait of her husband captures all the wisdom and grace
of old age as well as her love for him. Her portrait of Irina Baronova is
stunning in the way it captures the intense gaze of the subject and again, the
wisdom of age. Jenny Sages has been an Archibald Prize finalist TWENTY
times. I am in awe of her talent.