Biography
Venton was born and educated in Birmingham. He worked as a clerk
for a short time before joining the Army (aged 18), but was
invalided out after three years with serious clinical depression,
for which he received electric shock treatment. His elder brother
was killed at Arnhem, an event the family never really recovered
from and which contributed to Venton's state of mind. After
being demobbed in 1946, he attended the Birmingham College of
Art, where he met and married his wife Zena in 1951. In his
early years he was interested in Surrealism and for a while
had a painting room in the house of Conroy Maddox. Amongst Venton's
collection of books was a copy of Salvador Dali's autobiography,
which got placed in an old tea-chest during a house move and
forgotten, only to be rediscovered many years later having surreally
been infested and transformed into a wasps' nest.
Venton
lectured at Birmingham College of Art and later in London at
Heatherley's College of Art, but despite the appreciation and
admiration he received from many leading contemporary artists
of the time, Venton remained in the words of a colleague, "a
very private person, an observer, diffident about exhibiting".
Venton's work was included in the prestigious John Moores Painting
Prize in 1957 and 1961 and it was during this period that Birmingham
City Art Gallery and Walker Art Gallery (Liverpool) both acquired
examples for their public collections. In 1966 he was given
a solo show at the Ikon Gallery in Birmingham. Four paintings
were also exhibited in 2004 at the Ikon Gallery retrospective
and for many visitors these works proved a revelation, offering
a tantalising glimpse of a mature and hitherto largely unknown
talent.
'A
Point of Departure' (Venton's own phrase) offers the first broad
survey of Venton's art in more than forty years. Presented are
an ambitious group of paintings created between 1952 and 1964,
sensuously executed in heavy impasto, tirelessly applied and
reapplied with a palette knife, the paint surface subtly multi-layered
so the original subject matter is transfigured (the Point of
Departure) into a quite magical new reality - one approaching
pure abstraction. Fascinated by the play of light on form, his
'subjects', whether pots, pans and bottles on the studio table
or rock formations, would be radically abstracted into vibrant,
shimmering compositions of fluctuating light and tone. He would
revisit a painting, continuously refining and reworking the
surface, and the fertile inventiveness in terms of composition
and colour in these works is joyously impressive.
Venton
exhibited rarely during his lifetime, preferring instead to
develop in the privacy of his studio an exhilaratingly original
and exploratory artistic language all his own, which now commands
wider critical and public attention.
Venton died in Birmingham in 1987.
Solo
Exhibition
1966 - Ikon Gallery, Birmingham
Work
in Public Collections
Walker Art Gallery, Liverpool; Birmingham City Museum &
Art Gallery, Birmingham