
Tony Bevan British, b. 1951
Corridor (PC 9610), 1996
Acrylic on canvas
219 x 164 cm. (86 1/4 x 64 5/8 in.)
Copyright The Artist
Tony Bevan’s Corridor series, a central focus of his practice throughout the 1990s, investigates the intersection of physical architecture and the psychological terrain of the human mind. These paintings depict...
Tony Bevan’s Corridor series, a central focus of his practice throughout the 1990s, investigates the intersection of physical architecture and the psychological terrain of the human mind. These paintings depict receding passageways rendered in stark, linear forms, as though exposing the skeletal infrastructure of a building. Hovering between abstraction and figuration, material presence and spectral absence, the Corridors evoke spaces that are at once familiar and uncanny. Bevan imagines liminal zones where the everyday slides into the psychological, and structure becomes a conduit for emotional and existential tension.
Bevan conceptualises the corridor as a transitory space, a threshold between states of being. As Richard Dyer observes, “Bevan’s corridors function... within the arena of painting rather than that of film and narrative. Fragmentary, fragile, precarious, and at once open and closed, they act as conduits from one state to another. Like the mythological tunnel of light reported by those who have experienced ‘near-death’ episodes, they act metaphorically as active visual tropes for the possibility of shifting into different perceptual modalities... the viewer enters a psycho-physical space in which the painting acts as a semi-permeable membrane, a ‘leaky’ diaphragm between the physical fact of the universe and the possibility of dreaming while awake.” Dyer situates Bevan’s work within a lineage of cinematic vision, drawing parallels to scenes from Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968) and Ken Russell’s Altered States (1980).
The Corridor series is equally informed by Bevan’s engagement with art history and his environment. Richard Cork identifies the dramatic perspectival recession in Tintoretto’s The Finding of the Body of St Mark (1548) as a key influence, specifically the spatial drama generated by the painting’s barrel-vaulted ceiling. Closer to home, the architecture surrounding Bevan’s London studio – its decay, melancholy, and industrial desolation – served as an omnipresent muse. Cork recounts how, “One look through an open window was sufficient to trigger an obsession with the narrow, claustrophobic space he saw stretching away inside.”
The absence of human figures in Bevan’s Corridor works only heightens their eerie presence, anthropomorphising these spaces into sentient, animated beings. Traces of human intervention – cracks in the walls, drips on the floor, the hand-hewn construction of the spaces themselves – imbue the scenes with a palpable psychological charge. Without the physical presence of figures, the corridors resonate with an enduring human imprint, transformed into mnemonic sites of memory and existence.
Mark Livingstone interprets the Corridor series as a manifestation of Bevan’s dialogue with his studio, its confines, and its expanses. These works, Livingstone suggests, literalise the mental interior: the fissures, voids, and crevices of the mind materialised onto canvas. In this light, Bevan’s Corridors are not mere architectural spaces but thresholds into the psyche.
Bevan conceptualises the corridor as a transitory space, a threshold between states of being. As Richard Dyer observes, “Bevan’s corridors function... within the arena of painting rather than that of film and narrative. Fragmentary, fragile, precarious, and at once open and closed, they act as conduits from one state to another. Like the mythological tunnel of light reported by those who have experienced ‘near-death’ episodes, they act metaphorically as active visual tropes for the possibility of shifting into different perceptual modalities... the viewer enters a psycho-physical space in which the painting acts as a semi-permeable membrane, a ‘leaky’ diaphragm between the physical fact of the universe and the possibility of dreaming while awake.” Dyer situates Bevan’s work within a lineage of cinematic vision, drawing parallels to scenes from Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968) and Ken Russell’s Altered States (1980).
The Corridor series is equally informed by Bevan’s engagement with art history and his environment. Richard Cork identifies the dramatic perspectival recession in Tintoretto’s The Finding of the Body of St Mark (1548) as a key influence, specifically the spatial drama generated by the painting’s barrel-vaulted ceiling. Closer to home, the architecture surrounding Bevan’s London studio – its decay, melancholy, and industrial desolation – served as an omnipresent muse. Cork recounts how, “One look through an open window was sufficient to trigger an obsession with the narrow, claustrophobic space he saw stretching away inside.”
The absence of human figures in Bevan’s Corridor works only heightens their eerie presence, anthropomorphising these spaces into sentient, animated beings. Traces of human intervention – cracks in the walls, drips on the floor, the hand-hewn construction of the spaces themselves – imbue the scenes with a palpable psychological charge. Without the physical presence of figures, the corridors resonate with an enduring human imprint, transformed into mnemonic sites of memory and existence.
Mark Livingstone interprets the Corridor series as a manifestation of Bevan’s dialogue with his studio, its confines, and its expanses. These works, Livingstone suggests, literalise the mental interior: the fissures, voids, and crevices of the mind materialised onto canvas. In this light, Bevan’s Corridors are not mere architectural spaces but thresholds into the psyche.