Carl Plate
Destructive Paradox No. 3 Arrival ,
1959
PVA on canvas
99.3 x 72.5 cm (image); 101.7 x 75 cm (frame)
signed and dated ‘C…. 59’ (lower left), inscribed with title ‘DESTRUCTIVE PARADOX/NO. 3/ARRIVAL’ and signed and inscribed ‘CARL PLATE/41 ROWE ST SYDNEY’ and with Carl Plate catalogue no.723/59 (all on the reverse)
Exhibited
Carl Plate, Macquarie Galleries, Sydney, May-June 1960, cat.8
Elwyn Lynn, Carl Plate, The Museum of Modern Art, Melbourne, August-September 1960, cat.6
Literature
James Gleeson ‘Exciting Abstracts by Carl Plate’, Sydney Morning Herald, Sydney, 25 May 1960
Carl Plate catalogue no 723/59
Photography by Geoff Boccalatte
Soft, gently ragged masses emerged from an atmospheric matrix, fluctuating quietly, while lines strayed across them as if looking for the contours of a landscape form. Shifts of rhythm were given by clusters of leaf-like shapes, breaking away from their parent masses. The colours, bluish greens, browns, whites and elegiac greys – gave a calm face to images beneath which an implied world stirred uneasily. (Robert Hughes, The Art of Australia, Penguin Books, 1984, pp. 294-95.)
Returning from Europe after the Second World War, Carl Plate developed a profile as one of Sydney’s leading art world figures. A painter and collagist, he also ran the Notanda Gallery, an exhibition space and bookstore that served as a pivotal location for introducing contemporary art to Australia from Europe and the United States.
Inspired by encounters with Dada and Surrealist art and his travels through Europe and the Americas, Plate developed a style that was abstract, but with a dream-like undercurrent. He deployed colour to great effect, using a mostly reserved palette, though there are moments of vibrancy that attract the eye. At the same time, drawing was an integral component of Plate’s practice. “Colour,” he wrote in 1957, “although a joy to man’s soul, plays but a minor role in drawing, if it plays any role at all. The strength of drawing lies in its purity. Its purity makes it the most direct and personal of all forms of graphic expression.” This balance of opposites is a recurring feature in Plate’s work, which Bernard Smith felt “occupies a central, almost classical position between the linearists and the tonalists”.
Carl Plate exhibited extensively throughout his life alongside running the Notanda Gallery. In 1961, he was one of the “Sydney 9” group of abstract artists, exhibiting alongside John Olsen and William Rose. In 2006-07, the Art Gallery of New South Wales exhibited examples of Plate’s works from their collection. In 2009, an exhibition of his prolific collage works, ‘Carl Plate: Collage, 1938-1976’ was staged at the Hazelhurst Regional Gallery and Arts Centre. His work is represented in state and national collections in Australia, and in private collections in Australia, Europe and the United States.