Excerpt:
While previous studies of the artwork of Henry Speller,
a visual artist and blues musician from the Delta region
of Mississippi, have focused on the observational nature
of his drawings, recording moments of his life or the
buildings around Memphis, Tennessee, there is a much
greater, figural theme within Speller’s oeuvre which
bears deeper consideration in the light of his connection
to blues music: what has become known as the blues aesthetic.
Sometimes fashionable, but more often sexualised and
menacing, Speller’s figures fetishise the body. Based
on the blues lyrics Speller knew and performed, his
fascination with women in particular can be seen as
a visualisation of pain, functioning as a way of confronting
the complexities of the human situation through the
creation of fantasies. This theme in turn fits within
the realm of the grotesque and the abject, depicting
a shifting, wavy body that threatens to exceed containment.
Speller was born and raised near Rolling Fork, Mississippi.
Until around 1940, remaining in the area, growing crops,
loading riverboats and erecting telegraph poles. Reflecting
on this work, Speller stated, ‘Stand out there in that
cold water sometime up to your chin, thinking, “Don’t
want to drown." Then them boats come by, wheel rolling,
music, ladies, things going on. It give you some ideas
to think about, forget the other stuff.’
Speller connected what he witnessed on these boats
to this exhausting manual labour. The boats carried
a lifestyle that was the extreme opposite of his own,
and his memories of them produced compelling associations
in his drawings.
Untitled
(Lisa Jean), 1987, courtesy of William Arnett and the
Tinwood Alliance.