"Souza is a painter with a powerful and strange personal vision. His paintings are
neither primitive nor `cultured`. They either move you by their stark interpretation
of the visual world, or they repel you....He is an image-maker and not an aesthete
or a theorist. These are earth paintings, and their impact lies in the artist`s power to
distort and strengthen the eye`s image of this world, and to produce an effect almost
shocking in its intensity....Souza`s treatment of the figurative image is richly varied.
Besides the violence, the eroticism and the satire, there is a religious quality about his
work which is medieval in its simplicity and in its unsophisticated sense of wonder"
– Edwin Mullins , Souza, Anthony Blond Ltd, 1962, pp.33, 40
Created with Souza’s characteristic impasto and aggressive black line inspired
by the work of Rouault, Sutherland and Soutine, this dignified portrait
of a priest or nobleman draws from religious iconography and the work of
Renaissance and Romanesque painters. Also influenced by Cubism and works
like Picasso’s Les Demoiselles d’Avignon, Souza has bestowed the figure in this
work with almost-sculptural qualities, using light and shadow skilfully to
project it beyond its two-dimensional surface and heighten the impact it has
on the viewer.
"Souza is a painter with a powerful and strange personal vision. His paintings are
neither primitive nor `cultured`. They either move you by their stark interpretation
of the visual world, or they repel you....He is an image-maker and not an aesthete
or a theorist. These are earth paintings, and their impact lies in the artist`s power to
distort and strengthen the eye`s image of this world, and to produce an effect almost
sh