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"Awen yn codi o'r cudd, yn cydio'r cwbl"
- Waldo Williams
(Awen arising from hiding, everything binding)



Clive Hicks-Jenkins



Clive Hicks-Jenkins

Grey Mare Press


The National Library of Wales in Aberystwyth recently mounted an exhibition of the work of Clive Hicks-Jenkins to mark his sixtieth birthday. Two books were also published during this year, one offering colour plates and critical discussions, the other a collection of poems by six poets with detail from paintings on which they comment. What follows here are some of my own instinctive responses to this art.


I referred some time ago to this artist's work by using one of his illustrations to accompany previous blog comments on ‘The Ballad of the Mari Lwyd’ by Vernon Watkins. The collection of poems published this year includes a more recent Mari Lwyd poem by Catriona Urquhart. The stark black & white series of conte drawings featuring a looming horse's head attached to, or manipulated by, naked male figures have all the balletic energy of the artist’s previous trade of choreographer. His fascination with this folklore figure is apparent but many of his other paintings also feature animals in some relation to humans and this, for me, emerges as a dominant theme in my response to the paintings. 

 ‘Green George’ re-interprets the dragon-slaying myth, portraying the beast with a set of human-like teeth and eyes directly confronting his killer who rides on a crimson horse returning his gaze, has green-hued flesh and wears a soldier’s steel helmet. Physically near, but as if inhabiting a different plane, a girl sits self-absorbed. Symbolic items like a maze are placed in the paintings in a style reminiscent of David Jones. 


 ‘Elijah and the Raven’, ‘Kevin and his Sheep’, ‘The Blind Boy and his Beast’ and many other paintings convey a world where humans and animals are configured together in attitudes ranging from love to antagonism, but always with an essential sense of relationship. Wolves often appear as pet dogs, but without losing any of their fierceness or wildness. Clive Hicks-Jenkins’ work is characterised by Damian Walford Davies as ekphrastic, underlining the interactions between his art and literature. Given his own inspiration by literary texts, and the number of poems inspired by his paintings, it seems appropriate to offer my own brief commentary on one of his works: 


 The Mari Lwyd Approaches 

Barely contained, the man-horse or
Horse-man who is also
The Night Mare from Midwinter’s
Darkness strains at a leash
That hardly reigns him in
As the white sheet falls away
Revealing no ghost but
Bare flesh rampaging
Through the hard edges
Of habitations defensively protruding. 




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