Trevor Southey: 
Africa:
Africa and the Africans are part of my spiritual fibre. I am,
in fact, white - British colonial by direct cultural experience.
But African people surrounded me. I started portraying Africans and
their environs when I was still a boy. I believe that
as I internalized the sounds of the native languages, although I never
learned them much,I also internalized a sense of their natural beauty:
the generosity of their features, the lithe easy way of movement, and
all the variety of their colour - some a blue black like the patina of
living bronze sculpture, some a chocolate brown, some a creamy ochre.
My homeland did not practice such a virulent
form of segregation as that inspired by religion. But racism was
still part of my environment, albeit ill defined, thinly disguised
as benevolent. Nanny, William, Johnny, and others helped to break
it in my heart and life.
FAMILY: My hunger for the traditional family was and is part of my
paradox. Now I see a vision of a wholly different family embracing its
unusual children with joy, as well as those who weave traditional patterns.
It is a family of extraordinary tolerance and vision filled with wonder
at the uniqueness of each individual. It gasps only a little at differences,
demanding no adherence to a strict pattern of normalcy. Its only demands
are love, delight, surprise, courtesy, civility, discipline and above
all tolerance.
GAY: It made itself most known in my work. Even that work long
preserved within the seeming sanctity of a subject like the traditional
family would reflect that shunned part of my being. Works done innocently,
once they were complete still held the whole truth within them. Perhaps
no painting revealed that more clearly 
than Prodigal. Often while I refused
to acknowledge this, others could read it quite clearly. Prodigal was
conceived from Jesus' parable of reconciliation and familial love.
I feared the sensuality of this work, and indeed, it was gently declined
by the clients. At its conception and execution, that sensuality was
naive and even innocent, as were the deeper implications of content.
Other works follow as a celebration of this new personal "home,'
this integration, the comfort of finally being one within oneself and
one within a new society. Some of these images are almost embarrassingly
overt, though that was by no means my intention.
Reconciliation
Oil on board, 48 x 48 inches
Price on Request
|