Michael Ayrton
Self-Portrait, 1961
pencil on paper
27 x 40.5 cm
10 5/8 x 16 in
10 5/8 x 16 in
Ruth Borchard Collection
There are three letters from Michael Ayrton to Ruth Borchard dated to the mid-1960s. In the second letter, he writes: 'I haven't been able to do a self- portrait especially for you, but I have found a tolerable pencil drawing which looks like me and is a respectable piece of work.’ This self-portrait is signed and dated '23.12.1961', and so was drawn just about a month before his forty-first birthday. At around this time, Ayrton was preoccupied with what he called 'The Nature of Drawing': ‘the great problem of drawing,' he wrote, 'is how to make a permanent distillation, in a single image, of something which in fact has changed all the time under your eyes.' Like so much of Ayrton's work, this stern yet quietly fretful self- portrait has a slightly self-dramatising air, but what is so admirable here is how dispassionately the artist appears to be able to look at, and evoke, this particular trait in himself.
Ruth Borchard Original Collection
Exhibitions
Artists Self-Portraits, The Lightbox Gallery Working, 25 March - 25 June 2017,Self: Ruth Borchard Collection, Manx Museum Isle of Mann, October 2020 - March 2021
Artists Self-Portraits, The Lightbox Gallery Working, 25 March - 25 June 2017,
Self: Ruth Borchard Collection, Manx Museum Isle of Mann, October 2020 - March 2021