Whitfield Fine Art is presenting an exhibition of early abstract paintings by 20th Century British artist Theodore Mendez (1934-1997). The exhibition is a critical reassessment of this talented artist's early abstract work.

Theodore Mendez first attended Camberwell School of Arts and Crafts in 1950, at a time when so many, now icons, of 20th century British Art were also drawn to the School.

The 1940s had seen Victor Pasmore, Michael Ayrton, John Minton, Keith Vaughan, Edward Ardizzone and William Coldstream hold posts on the teaching staff, and Mendez arrived when the likes of Terry Frost, Howard Hodgkin, Euan Uglow, Roy Turner Durrant, Bernard Dunstan and Gillian Ayres were all students there.

Mendez spent three years in this company before completing his textile design studies at London University's Institute of Education from 1956 to 1957.

During the 1950s he exhibited first at the Redfern Gallery in 1954; he would later show his textile designs at the Victoria & Albert Museum in 1956; and in the same year went on to win the Design Award at the Manchester Colour, Design & Style Centre. Mendez returned to take up a teaching post at Camberwell in 1958, the same year as Frank Auerbach would start his time on the staff.

They would be colleagues until 1965, when Auerbach left his post, and Mendez continued to teach full-time, later becoming Head of the Textile Department from 1976 until his retirement in 1984.

The influence of Camberwell is very evident in this selection of Mendez's early work. Elements of Auerbach's, Dunstan's, Uglow's and Frost's work can be picked out, whilst the works still all maintain the individual style that Mendez would develop and make his own.

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