Figurative paintings and Pop Art (1950s and 1960s) Bowling’s artistic career began with his first commercial exhibition,
Image in Revolt, at the
Grabowski Gallery in Chelsea, London, in October 1962. In autumn 1963, Bowling had begun to teach painting at
Camberwell School of Art in London. There, with the assistance of the textiles department, he amassed a stockpile of canvas pieces bearing the image of his mother’s emporium screen-printed in red or green. The first painting in which the image was deployed was
Cover Girl (1966). The title refers to the young woman with the
Mary Quant-style dress and the
Vidal Sassoon helmet haircut, an image appropriated from the cover of an
Observer colour supplement of March 1966. The masterpiece of the first phase of Frank Bowling’s career is
Mirror (1964–66), the culmination of years of development in London. In this painting, Bowling appears twice: at the top of a spiral staircase from the Royal College of Art’s painting school, and at the foot of the stairwell, a metaphor for transition and emergence. In between is the figure of
Paddy Kitchen.
"Map paintings" (1967–1971) From around 1967 to 1971, shortly after arriving in New York, Bowling made a group of works now known as the map paintings. For Bowling, the map motif served both as evocative subject matter and as device to organize the flat, modernist picture plane. Bowling elected to present three of these epically proportioned canvases –
Marcia H Travels (1970),
Texas Louise (1971), and
Australia to Africa (1971) – together with two marginally smaller works,
Polish Rebecca (1971) and
Traveling with Robert Hughes (1969-70), in his first solo museum exhibition, held at the
Whitney Museum of American Art from 4 November to 6 December 1971.
"Poured paintings" (1974–1978) In 1974, Bowling constructed a movable wood platform, pivoted like a seesaw, so that paint could be poured onto unstretched canvas pegged to the tilted surface. Known as the poured paintings, they were characterised by their upright, rectangular format, linearity of cascading poured paint and masked edges. The combination of chance and precise technique resulted in process-driven works that share affinities with a long lineage of abstract painting. The poured paintings were the subject of an exhibition at Tate Britain in 2012.
1980s By the early 1980s, dense, encrusted and flowing paintings, often using a large amount of gel, were a significant aspect of Bowling’s painterly practice. A turning point arrived in the summer of 1984, when he arrived at the
Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture in
Maine for an artist-teacher residency. Quite quickly, he began to incorporate a broad range of objects into his paintings such as newsprint, plastic and foam. In 1986, Bowling exhibited a group of major new paintings at the
Serpentine Gallery in London, curated by
Ronald Alley, then Keeper of Modern Art at the Tate Gallery. Among the works on display was
Wintergreens (1986), now in the Royal Academy’s collection. A year after the show at the Serpentine Gallery, a key work from the same year,
Spreadout Ron Kitaj (1986), was acquired by Tate. Also in 1987, Bowling created
Philoctete’s Bow, a work characterised by complex, textured surfaces, essentially additive and collage-like (involving stitching, patching and gluing fragments to the surface). Towards the end of the 1980s, Bowling made his
Great Thames series of paintings (1989), in homage to the great English landscape painters
J. M. W. Turner and
Thomas Gainsborough. This was also the period Bowling started making sculpture. Seven sculptures resulted. For the 1988 exhibition at the
Royal West of England Academy (RWA) in Bristol, he made a further group of sculptures in
galvanised steel.
2000s to the present In 2009, Bowling produced a series of vertical and horizontal "zippers" paintings, including
Epps,
Litchfield and
Chinese Chance (all 2009), suggesting tall skies or long horizons. In 2011, Bowling presented new works known as the
Crossings at ROLLO Contemporary Art in London. In these paintings, bands of colour are overloaded along the centre of the canvas creating a thickly textured build-up of contrasting colour.
Crossing: Snakeheadpassage (2011) and
Crossing: Liberty (2011) are two such examples. In 2017, there was a retrospective of his work at
Haus der Kunst in
Munich. A major retrospective exhibition of his work was on view at
Tate Britain in 2019.
Land of Many Waters, a major exhibition of unseen works by Bowling, alongside key paintings from the previous decade, was exhibited at the
Arnolfini in Bristol in 2021. In 2022, the Stephen Lawrence Gallery at the
University of Greenwich focused on his sculptures and the sculptural aspects of his paintings in an exhibition called
Frank Bowling and sculpture. The exhibition ''Frank Bowling's Americas'' was at the
Museum of Fine Arts Boston from 22 October 2022 to 9 April 2023 and at the
San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA) from 13 May to 10 September 2023. Bowling's paintings have been shown in numerous exhibitions in continental Europe, the United Kingdom and the United States and are included in major private and corporate collections worldwide. His work can also be seen in the permanent collections of the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Museum of Modern Art in
New York, as well as the Tate Gallery in London. In 2024 The Tate Library in Brixton hosted an exhibition of his work with discussions and workshops about his art as part of
Black History month.
Art criticism, curatorial work and teaching From 1969 to 1972, Bowling was a critic and contributing editor at
Arts Magazine, where he rejected the idea that "artists who happen to be black" should be making overtly political or protest art, and defended those engaged in abstraction. His critical writings represent a significant contribution to intellectual debates on "black art". His writings have been included in several publications such as
The Soul of a Nation Reader and
Mappa Mundi. In 1969, he organised an important exhibition at
Stony Brook University, New York, titled
5+1 that included abstract works by five Black American artists –
Melvin Edwards,
Daniel LaRue Johnson,
Al Loving,
Jack Whitten, and
William T. Williams – together with his own paintings. Bowling held teaching positions at many institutions, including at Camberwell School of Art, where he taught painting in 1963, and lectureships at the
University of Reading (until 1967);
Columbia University, New York (until 1969);
Rutgers University, New Jersey (until 1970); and
Massachusetts College of Art, Boston (1970–71).
Role within the history of postwar British art From the late 1960s onwards, Bowling’s work appeared in many of the century’s most important exhibitions that centred upon the work of Black-British and Afro-Caribbean artists. Historian and artist
Eddie Chambers notes how Bowling took part in an important, though now largely forgotten, 1978 London exhibition entitled
Afro-Caribbean Art alongside a variety of other major artists from Africa and its diasporic populations. Participants included
Lubaina Himid,
Donald Locke,
Eugene Palmer, Mohamed Ahmed Abdalla and Keith Ashton. Bowling was also featured in the highly influential 1989 exhibition
The Other Story, held in London’s
South Bank Centre. The show sought to survey the history of postwar, Black-British art, serving as one of only two shows to ever tackle the subject matter. Curated by the London-based, Pakistani artist
Rasheed Araeen, the landmark show sought to demonstrate the ways in which the history of contemporary non-Western art could be understood as both a variety of independent art-historical narratives as well as integral to a mainstream story of global art history. Araeen devised this curatorial approach as a protest against what he took to be a pervasive way of marginalising non-Western art histories in which artists working outside of the Western canon would be presented as existing within an insular, Western-adjacent canon. Participants included Rasheed Araeen, Salim Arif, Eddie Chambers,
Aubrey Williams and
Ronald Moody. ==Family life==