Born in Malaya in 1953, Bernard Irwin is a British artist whose career spans painting, sculpture and ceramics. Having grown up in England and Germany, and later studied in the Netherlands, Irwin returned to England in 1981, working from his studio in Bristol before settling in Cornwall in 1996, where he now paints full time.
Irwin’s work is steeped in the legacy of post-war abstraction, recalling the confident, colour-forward sensibility of 1960s American painting. His compositions – both on canvas and in sculptural form – are openly decorative and unburdened by irony. Colour is the driving force, a celebration of what Kenneth Noland once described as “the origin of painting.” These are works that embrace a kind of formal hedonism: seductive in their palette, rigorous in structure, and deeply attuned to the sensorial impact of colour in space.
Informed by the guiltless museum art of post-Matissean painters such as Morris Louis and Noland himself, Irwin’s visual language is joyful, unapologetic, and quietly radical. Shape becomes a vehicle – not for narrative, but for sensation. The result is a body of work that is both contemporary and timeless: art that radiates with clarity and pleasure.
CIRCLE is proud to present Bernard Irwin as part of its core group of artists.