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"McCartney's First Art Show Opens" (AP)

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May 23, 2002, 4:07:47 PM5/23/02
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"McCartney's First Art Show Opens"
By GRAHAM HEATHCOTE

LIVERPOOL, England (AP) - As a youth, Paul McCartney would skip school
with fellow Beatle John Lennon and the two would go visit a local art gallery.
McCartney has returned to the same gallery for the first comprehensive
exhibition of his art.
The show of some 70 paintings by McCartney, dating from 1987 to 2001,
opens Friday at the Walker Art Gallery and runs through Aug. 1 in the
singer-songwriter's home town.
``I used to come here as a schoolboy,'' McCartney said. ``If I had said to
John then, `I'm going to have an exhibition here one day,' I think I know what
he would have said. I'll leave it to your imagination.''
Casually dressed in a T-shirt, denim jacket, black trousers and sandals,
McCartney, who turns 60 next month, looked relaxed and fit. He chatted affably
as a media throng stood, kneeled and squatted before him at a preview Thursday
of the exhibition.
McCartney's brightly colored and slapdash paintings are shown with six
sculptures made from driftwood. None of the works, taken from his homes in
Britain and the United States, are up for sale.
His canvases depict landscapes, shells, flowers, people with often wild
faces and Celtic mythology - McCartney has Irish roots. Most of the pictures
are sunny but several are dark and mysterious. One, ``Bowie Spewing,'' shows
fellow pop icon David Bowie being sick.
However, McCartney did not claim to be a great painter. ``I'm not out to
show the world what I can do. I'm not trying to impress anybody except myself.
I think I've shown the world enough already,'' he said.
As for the critics, McCartney said he wasn't very interested in their
opinions.
``Some will like them and some won't. They're entitled to their opinions
but I never read them,'' he said. ``I really just do it for my own enjoyment.
There's so much to learn, that's half the fun.''
Julian Treuherz, keeper of the Walker, said the gallery was planning to
limit the large crowds expected.
The Walker opened in 1877 and is filled with the works of such old masters
as Rembrandt van Rijn and Nicholas Poussin, and the pre-Raphaelites. The
gallery has a long tradition of displaying local artists' work.
McCartney retains a house in Liverpool, which he visits regularly; his
composition, ``Oratorio,'' has been performed in Liverpool Cathedral.
His art was first seen in 1999 in Siegen, Germany, where a local gallery
persuaded him to do a show and the enthusiastic response let him know there was
an interested public.
Michael Simpson, the former curator of modern art at the Walker who
selected the paintings on display, said McCartney's work was all about heart.
``Love and passion are resonant themes in his music and so, too, now in
his paintings. Without heart, art is not art, it is meaningless,'' said
Simpson.
Among the abstract paintings is a large red heart with the figure of a
female nude scratched on the surface titled ``Big Heart, 1999.'' It is one of
the few works in the show painted by McCartney since meeting his fiancee,
Heather Mills, after the death of his wife, Linda.
``Big hearts is what Paul and Linda said they most wanted for their
children, and a big heart is now what he plainly has for Heather,'' said Joe
Cooper, the Walker's communications manager.
``The Kiss,'' shows McCartney kissing Linda and ``Hottest Linda,'' depicts
his late wife sunbathing.
McCartney won an art prize for a drawing of a church when he was 11 but he
only began painting seriously 20 years ago. The exhibition will only be shown
in Liverpool, where all four Beatles were born, grew up and came together as a
band.


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