Adam's IMPORTANT IRISH ART 1st June 2022

72 There are twenty four years in the difference between these two oil paintings by Yeats (lots 40 and 41 in this sale) and while we can clearly see the transition in his style to a looser and increasingly abstracted expression, the work still holds great emotion and descriptive quality. Quite astonishingly he produced more than half of his works in oil in the last fifteen years of his life. In this period, he is often drawing on memory and past expe- riences and we get the sense that we are looking in on a scene, but without being fully able to grasp it. In this work we are not offered much in the way of context, with the evocative and strangely poetic title of The Folded Heart . Yeats favoured this ambiguity in his mature works often using titles that were highly imaginative and metaphysical in nature. The figure is oblivious to being observed, focused on the rhythmic action of her work, carefully folding the table linens before returning them to the heavy bureau in front of her. While this domestic task is the central visual focus of the composition, we cannot help but read more into work, with this symbolic title possibly allud- ing to a more lyrical interpretation. Is Yeats referring to his own emotions when recalling this scene? Or does it reflect on the hidden and unknown aspects of a person’s mind? We cannot know what her thoughts or feelings might be as she carriers out her duties. This work is in many ways is reminiscent of traditional Dutch genre scenes, which often featured singular female figures enclosed within interiors, carrying out seemingly ordinary domestic tasks, but which were in fact often filled with multiple layers and meanings. Yeats works quickly, applying the paint in varying directions, creating a distinct sense of texture and movement to the surface. He suggests at objects and forms without fully rendering them. He has left sections of the un- primed canvas bare, most notably the wall directly behind the figure, while in other areas the paint is thickly and generously applied. The folded linen is a myriad of white, blue and yellow tones and we are barely able to distinguish the woman’s hands from her work. For her skirt he has used the end of the paint brush, scraping lines into the surface to suggest the pleated folds, while her pink blouse is a mass of quick impastoed strokes. He often painted facial features wet on wet, conveying a nose, mouth and eyes with the slightest of touches. Works of this period are often darker in tone, favouring greys and blacks in his palette. When colour is intro- duced, in the clothing of the figure or the streak of green along the skirting board it has a heightened power. The shadowed corner to the left of the canvas is illuminated by a blaze of yellow spilling in through the open window with a small glimpse of the blue sky beyond. Despite the lack of explicit narrative content, through his use of colour and line, we form an understanding of the material world of the painting. Yeats allows the paint to direct the work and, in many ways, it becomes the work itself. Our eyes are drawn across the composition, allowing us to delight in the juxtapositions between the restrained paired back application with the sumptuous and vigorous moments of expression. Niamh Corcoran, May 2022

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