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Watch The Film
Anita Klein | Water
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The aquatic theme of this exhibition was partially arrived at when Anita Klein was awarded the 2020/21 ‘Printmaker of the Year’ prize by Printfest, a print festival based in Cumbria. This award includes a residency in Ulverston, Cumbria, and a commissioned print based on the local area. The resulting piece was the linocut Into Lake Windermere, which manages to capture in sensuous blues and greens the rolling hills of the countryside that mirror the ripples of the body of water in which the figure swims.
While this prize may have spurred the creation of some of the works in this water-themed show, swimming and water are not new artistic interests for Anita. When the ‘Printmaker of the Year’ prize was awarded, Anita was already working on paintings and prints based on her experiences of wild swimming in Lake Lucerne in Switzerland and in the Tiber River in Tuscany. Anita has been in love with the sensations of swimming, particularly its meditative quality, since childhood. She grew up in Australia, where she honed her swimming skills in an Olympic outdoor pool, in rivers, dams, and the sea. Once she moved to London aged eleven, she spent her summers in the Parliament Hill Lido and could be found swimming outside whenever she was able.
Swimming was made difficult in March 2020 because of the lockdown. Initially unable to visit Italy, as she does every summer, and unable to go to lidos or even travel around England very easily, Anita found another solution. She discovered a group of swimmers at the Royal Docks in East London. She states that even though this year has been “weird and terrible”, the experience of swimming in the Thames has been a lifesaver. The linocut Reflections in the Dock and the painting Royal Docks Swim capture this specific experience from a very odd year, while also remaining – as Anita’s works always do – applicable to the lives of many viewers.
A similar subject, ‘bathers’, appears often throughout art history. Famous paintings on this topic usually depict multiple people within or around a body of water – this is a more typical subject, historically, than the individual swimmer. One of the most famous of these ‘bathers’ works is Paul Cézanne’s The Large Bathers of 1898. In opposition to Anita’s work, this painting is more concerned with the triangular composition that the women and the water make on the canvas, rather than how these women interact with the water next to them, and how this water makes them feel, both mentally and physically. Anita’s water paintings and prints play upon the history of swimming and bathing in art but speak more to the interiority of the swimming experience. Perhaps a better comparison might be made with Duncan Grant’s Bathing from 1901, originally painted as a mural for the Borough Polytechnic in London and now held in the Tate collection. While there may appear to be seven nude men diving and swimming in this work, one analysis of the piece suggests that the scene is actually indicative of how one single person might dive into, move through, and emerge out of a body of water. This is the feeling that Anita captures in her works, but the sensation is embodied in just one autobiographical figure. Both Duncan Grant and Anita Klein depict water in a way that captures its movement and its varying hues; this contributes to the feeling of a body moving through water. The ribbons of colour in Anita’s paintings like Reflections in the Dock and Treading Water are more than just blue or green or grey. Strips of coloured waterenvelope the figures in both Anita Klein’s and Duncan Grant’s works to suggest subtle sliding movements that disturb the surface of the water – but bring peace to the swimmer.
In these works, Anita clearly conveys, with form and with colour, what she wants people to see in her art: “the physical feeling of my favourite moments…. the experiences that literally slip through my fingers”. In this new body of work, the passing of time is succinctly symbolised by the movement of water, something that never stays in one place for more than a moment. To show this type of motion, Anita has “had to invent a completely new visual language… to paint the feel of water in all its guises”. She had to do this in order to express how she really felt while having what she calls “peak life experiences”: the bodily sensation of swimming in the rain, the silence of swimming in the wilderness, and the joy of a cool pool on a hot day. This slippery feeling of water, and time, passing through one’s fingers is deftly depicted in Anita’s new paintings Swimming in the Rain and Swimming in Lake Windermere. In these pieces, the figure’s hands glide through the silky water that is either disturbed by droplets of rain or only by the body slicing through it. This intangible moment, sliding through the water’s surface, is gone before one even realises that it is happening.
The curved and fractured body that hides just beneath the surface of the water—portrayed beautifully in Anita’s painting Treading Water, among others—shows how we can become a new person through this transformative experience of swimming, whether that be in a pool, at the beach, or in a silent lake in the mountains. This experience is meditative for Anita:
"Especially in open water swimming, when underwater is darkness, the water surface is an abstract pattern of light, and all you can hear is your own breathing and the splashing water. Thoughts come and go but often the sensory experience is all that fills my head, and time passes with no self-conscious awareness. Modern life gives us so few opportunities to be so truly alone with no external interference. Life used to be much more boring when I was growing up—we had far fewer distractions to fill our empty moments. And I’m sure that it was those boring empty times that were the real fuel for creativity as well as the moments that taught us to enjoy our own company."
This act of pausing just for the sake of calm and reflection, and to invite creativity, is a continuity between Anita’s newest water-inspired works and those that show her interactions with her family. It has been said before that Anita’s paintings and prints are about the fleeting moment: the one that we don’t appreciate until it has passed. Her work makes us stop to really notice and fully understand that these times are special – and that they can easily slip through our fingers, like water. We can see the combination of these two loves of Anita’s life (water and family) in paintings like Betty Jumping In or First Time in the Sea. The chance to swim in wild water, or to visit a lido with your friends or family, was made even more precious in the months since lockdown. These are the instances – of touch, of socialisation, and of normal activity – that we must savour more intentionally during the best of times, so that we can lean back on our memories during the worst.
Christine Slobogin, October 2020
To view our online catalogue for Anita Klein | Water please click here
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PAINTINGS
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Anita KleinSwimming in Sunshine, 2020Sold
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Anita Klein, Silky Water, 2020
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Anita Klein, Into the Lake, 2019
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Anita KleinAlla Piscina, 2020£6,500.00
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Anita KleinDressing After Swimming, 2020£6,500.00
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Anita KleinRoyal Docks Swim, 2020£6,500.00
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Anita Klein, Reflections in the Dock, 2020
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Anita KleinIn the Lake, 2019Sold
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Anita Klein, Lake Swim, 2020
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Anita KleinNel Lago, 2014£10,000.00
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Anita Klein, Swimming in the Rain, 2020
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Anita Klein, The Grebe, 2020
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Anita KleinA Glass of Water, 2020£3,000.00
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Anita KleinNella Piscina, 2016Sold
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Anita Klein, Betty Jumps In, 2020
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Anita Klein, Nuotare (Swimming), 2016
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Anita KleinSacha at the Pool, 2018£2,500.00
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Anita Klein, Treading Water, 2020
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Anita Klein, Washing Hands, 2016
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Anita Klein, Paddling, 2019
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Anita KleinEarly Morning on the Beach, 2019£6,500.00
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Anita KleinDopo Nuotare (After Swimming), 2019£5,500.00
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Anita KleinNel Fiume, 2018£6,500.00
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Anita Klein, Into Lake Windermere, 2019
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Anita KleinUccello nella Pioggia , 2019£6,500.00
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Anita KleinArcobaleno, 2019£7,000.00
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Anita KleinBetty Jumping In, 2019£7,500.00
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Anita KleinAfter Swimming, 2016£6,500.00
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Anita Klein, First Time in the Sea, 2019
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Anita Klein, Swimming in Lake Windermere, 2019
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Anita KleinJumping in Together, 2019£8,000.00
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Anita KleinThe Beautiful Water, 2020Sold
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Anita Klein, The Swimmer, 2017
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Anita KleinThe Lido, 2018£7,000.00
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Anita KleinShower After Swimming, 2019£6,500.00
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Anita Klein, Swimming in Cold Water I, 2020
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Anita Klein, Swimming in Cold Water II, 2020
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Anita Klein, By The River, 2019
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Anita Klein, Swimming in the Rain , 2020
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Original Prints
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Anita KleinIn the Lake, 2019£750.00
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Anita KleinLake Swim, 2020£525.00
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Anita KleinReflections in the Dock, 2020£525.00
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Anita KleinThe Beautiful Water, 2020£750.00
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Anita KleinSwimming in the Lake, 2014
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Anita KleinRain on the Lake (Black and White), 2020£800.00
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Anita KleinRain on the Lake, 2020£1,170.00
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Anita Klein, Betty Jumps In, 2020
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Anita KleinEarly Morning on the Beach, 2019£750.00
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Anita KleinInto Lake Windermere, 2019£750.00
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Anita KleinSwimming, 2016£750.00
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Anita KleinSummer Rain, 2013£525.00
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Anita KleinThe Storm, 2013£680.00
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Anita KleinRain, 2014£525.00
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Anita KleinShower After Swimming, 2019£525.00
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Anita Klein, In the Pool, 2018
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Anita KleinThe Swimmer, 2017£525.00
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Anita KleinChanging After Swimming, 2020£220.00
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Anita KleinAfter Swimming, 2018£430.00
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Anita KleinJumping In, 2019£660.00
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Anita KleinSwimming in Cold Water, 2019£110.00
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Anita Klein, Swimming in the Rain, 2019
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Anita KleinWashing Hands, 2016£110.00
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Anita Klein | Water
Past viewing_room