The Treasure House Fair 2023
22 – 26 June 2023
Our summer season continues with an exhibition of Modern British paintings and sculpture, featuring new acquisitions. A selection will be at the new Treasure House Fair which replaces Masterpiece at the Chelsea Hospital site.
After the fair the full exhibition will be at the gallery until the end of July.
Featured Works
Kenneth Armitage
Two Seated Figures (small version B with crossed arms), 1957
Bronze
32 x 43 x 31 cm.
Edition of 6
Provenance
Marlborough Fine Art, London
Private collection (purchased from the above in 1959)
Literature
T. Woollcombe (ed.), Kenneth Armitage: Life and Work, London, 1997, p. 144, no. KA70.
J. Scott, The Sculpture of Kenneth Armitage, London, 2016, p. 111, no. 71, plaster version illustrated.
Exhibited
London, Whitechapel Art Gallery, Kenneth Armitage, July – August 1959, no. 33, another cast exhibited, catalogue not traced.
Hanover, Kestner-Gesellschaft, Kenneth Armitage/Lynn Chadwick, April – May 1960, no. 16, another cast exhibited, as ‘Two seated figures (small model)’, catalogue not traced.
Norwich, Arts Council of Great Britain, Castle Museum, Kenneth Armitage, December 1972 – January 1973, no. 9, another cast exhibited: this exhibition travelled to Bolton, Museum and Art Gallery, January – February 1973; Oldham, Art Gallery, February – March 1973; Kettering, Art Gallery, March – April 1973; Nottingham, Victoria Street Gallery, April – May 1973; Portsmouth, Museum and Art Gallery, May – June 1973; Plymouth, City Art Gallery, June – July 1973; Llanelli, Museum and Art Gallery, August – September 1973; Leeds, City Art Gallery, September 1973; and Hull, Ferens Art Gallery, October 1973.
Additional information
From the edition of 6
Armitage moved from being represented by Gimpel fils to Marlborough Fine Art, London in the Autumn of 1959. This particular cast was bought from Marlborough that year and was unsigned and unnumbered.
When, in December 1994, Armitage was elected a Royal Academician, he donated ‘Reclining Figure (Relief)’ as a diploma work, and recorded that it had been shown in the Venice Biennale in 1958 and that ‘This cast which I have kept all these years is neither signed nor dated because I didn’t in those days.’
David Bomberg
Calle San Pedro, Cuenca, 1934
Oil on Canvas
67.01 x 52 cm.
signed 'Bomberg' and dated '34 (lower right)
Provenance
Acquired by the late owner in the 1960s
Additional information
In his youth, David Bomberg was an artistic rebel, enmeshed in avant-garde artistic circles and producing works of remarkable and audacious creative power. His course as an artist was inextricably altered by the devastating experience of the First World War, which, as it had for so many of his contemporaries, pulled him back from the artistic ideals which had so inspired him. He spent much of the 1920s in Palestine, painting the austere landscape of the countryside and the tightly packed roof top views of the cities. These ordered renditions, which conveyed a white heat so alien to someone from the East End of London, received decent critical reviews upon their exhibition at the Leicester Galleries in 1928, but his old allies in the art world, and indeed Bomberg himself, felt that in their conventionality they had veered too far from his revolutionary early roots. Bomberg sought a new direction in his stylistic development, and finding no inspiration in the English countryside, he set off for Spain.
Bomberg settled in Toledo, perhaps in part due to his admiration of El Greco, who was little known in England, but whose work he had been introduced to in Palestine. While painting on a balcony he met two English women who happened to have an El Greco reproduction on hand and Bomberg was immediately struck by the ferocious and inventive intensity of the Spanish master. Breaking from his controlled Palestinian style, in Toledo Bomberg began to produce paintings which combined an expressive and spiritual response to the landscape with an intellectual lucidity which had also typified El Greco’s otherworldly images.
‘If Toledo had provided him with the breakthrough he needed, other Spanish sites might help him reach an even deeper understanding of the natural forces he cherished’
(RICHARD CORK (ED.), DAVID BOMBERG, LONDON, TATE GALLERY, 1988, PP. 30-31).
It was during this trip, in a pension in Madrid, that Bomberg had seen an engraving of Cuenca and been inspired by the geographical make-up of the city, known as Eagles Nest, perched on a hilltop and straddled either side by great ravines and the rivers Júcar and Huécar. In 1934, five years after his initial trip to Spain, having spent disappointing intervening years in London and Russia, Bomberg set his sights on Cuenca to enliven his work as Toledo had done before. As Richard Cork states:
‘Perched on a high rock ridge with rivers on either side, the ancient town provided Bomberg with an ideal interplay between buildings and the landscape they so dramatically occupied. His paintings stress the rootedness of Cuenca’s houses, the way they appear to grow out of the rock on which they stand. In the most elaborate picture he carried out there, Cuenca from Mount Socorro, town and rock are fused in an energetic mass filled with Bomberg’s heightened awareness of a geological conflict between cohesion and stress. As at Toledo, sunset fired him to see the town in near-visionary terms, where the houses appear to lose much of their substance and dissolve into a landscape suffused with the incandescence of dying light. Unlike Toledo, however, Bomberg’s brushwork now strives for a greater breadth, shedding the intricacy of the 1929 work in favour of a more summary and unified approach to form’
(RICARD CORK, OP. CIT.)
In Cuenca Bomberg painted in the open air as often as possible, travelling around on a donkey in order to locate the best vantage points from which to paint. Many of the resulting paintings have been taken from a high viewpoint from which the town appears as part of the patchwork quilt of the surrounding landscape. Architecture, hillside and landscape are painted with the same tones and brushwork, often under the all-encompassing atmospheric glare of sunset. The low viewpoint and focus on the street of San Pedro in the present work produces a very different effect which emphasises the impression of Cuenca’s ‘Hanging Houses’. The buildings rise up from the cliffs, their outlines producing a lyrical effect when presented against the bright sky.
Brendan Burns
Autumnal Bloom, 2021
Oil and wax on linen
160 x 175 cm.
Additional information
Signed with initials, titled and dated verso
Brendan Burns
Backwash, 2023
Oil and wax on linen
120 x 180 cm.
Signed verso
Brendan Burns
Bloom, 2023
Oil and wax on linen
140 x 170 cm.
Brendan Burns
Flare, 2019
Oil and wax on linen
100 x 120 in.
Provenance
The artist
Exhibited
“Edging West” an exhibition of new paintings and ceramics at Osborne Samuel Gallery 28 November to 20 December 2019
Additional information
Signed, titled and dated verso
Reg Butler
Figure in Space, 1956
Bronze
51 x 24 x 30.5 cm.
Signed with monogram and numbered from the edition of 8 (on left leg); stamped with foundry mark Susse Fondeur Paris (on right leg)
Edition of 8
Provenance
Private Collection, New York, by 1959
Private Collection, 2003
Grosvenor Gallery, London, 2004
Private Collection, UK
Osborne Samuel London
Literature
Colin Ralph, The Colin Collection: Paintings, Watercolours, Drawings and Sculpture collected by Mr. & Mrs. Ralph F. Colin, New York, 1960
Margaret Garlake, New Art, New World: British Art in Postwar Society, Yale University Press, New Haven and London, 1998
Margaret Garlake, The sculpture of Reg Butler, Henry Moore Foundation in Association with Lund Humphries, 2006, cat no.176, illustrated Fig 35, p.43
Exhibited
Hanover Gallery, May-June 1957 (Cat 34.)
Pierre Matisse Gallery, New York, February 1959 (cat, 14)
J.B. Speed Art Museum, Louisville, Kentucky, Oct.-Dec. 1963, Reg Butler, A Retrospective Exhibition, cat 67
Additional information
Butler was a man with two distinct, yet highly accomplished, careers. As Cottrell, Butler he was an architect with a burgeoning practice, while as Reg he was an essentially untrained avant-garde sculptor, having only worked briefly as an assistant in Henry Moore’s studio in 1947 and tried his hand as a blacksmith during the war, whose idiosyncratic style and experimental approach drew the attention of contemporary artists and critics alike. While exhibiting at both the 1952 and 1954 Venice Biennales he made a significant contribution to Herbert Read’s defining concept of post-war art, the so-called ‘Geometry of Fear’, and was also talent spotted by international gallerists such as Curt Valentin in New York and later Pierre Matisse.
Figure in Space is one of Butler’s finest explorations into the human figure. His architectural background provided him with a sensitive understanding of the relationship between form and space, an understanding which he applied to strong effect through the creation of cage-like structures, such as that visible here, which are very similar to those used by Alberto Giacometti and Francis Bacon in their work. In this instance the structures surrounding the atrophied human figure provide the sculpture with an extraordinary sense of movement while also referencing the spruing which surround bronzes in the initial stages of the casting process. By drawing our attention to the making process itself Butler draws our attention to the artificiality of the human figure and encourages a detached, Existentialist, standpoint. Butler explained this to Pierre Matisse: ‘to me the so-called base…is a very important part of the total sculpture – it isn’t merely a base but I’m sure does things to the meaning of the whole thing’ (letter to Pierre Matisse, November 1966, quoted in Pierre Matisse and His Artists (exh. cat)., The Pierpoint Morgan Library, New York, 2002, p.128).
Pierre Matisse was quick to sign Reg Butler into his stable of artists after the Curt Valentin Gallery closed in 1955, although Matisse struggled to develop a close working relationship with Erica Brausen who represented Butler in London. In March 1956 he included Butler in an exhibition alongside prestigious and established names such as Le Corbusier, Giacometti, Marino Marini and Joan Miro (among others), but it was not until February 1959 that he was able to stage a solo exhibition. It was not only Butler’s idiosyncratic approach to form which fascinated Matisse and ensured him a place in his prestigious gallery but also the sensuality of his figures which sat very well alongside those of Balthus and Maillol, who were regular features at the gallery.
Lynn Chadwick
Sitting Woman in Robes IV, 1987
Bronze
91.01 x 91 x 94 cm.
Edition of 9
Provenance
Galeria Freites, Caracas
Private Collection, South America
Creative Frames, Johannesburg, by the late 1990s, (acquired from the above)
Private Collector, UK
Literature
Farr & Chadwick, ‘Lynn Chadwick Sculptor,’ published by Lund Humphries, 2006, p. 275. no. C 62
Exhibited
Caracas, Galería Freites, Lynn Chadwick, May 1988, cat. no.26, illustrated (probably this cast).
Lynn Chadwick
Winged Figures, 1975
Bronze
18 cm.
Edition of 9
Literature
Lynn Chadwick, Sculptor, Farr, Dennis and Eva Chadwick, Oxford University Press, 1997, no. 704s, illus. p. 301 (another example illustrated)
John Craxton
Dancer in a Landscape, 1943
Pencil, charcoal and conté crayon and gouache on paper
45.9 x 58.65 cm.
Provenance
Christopher Hull Gallery
Private collection, UK 1992
Private Collection, UK
Literature
Ian Collins, John Craxton, Lund Humphries, Farnham, 2011, p.49, illustrated pl.43
Additional information
Dancer in a Landscape belongs to a series of images, painted or drawn by Craxton in the early 1940s, depicting solitary figures. He later described them as projections of himself, ‘derived from Blake and Palmer. They were my means of escape and a sort of self protection. A shepherd is a lone figure, and so is a poet.’ ₁
Poet in a Landscape and Dreamer in Landscape (now in the Tate collection) are dense pen and ink drawings, reproduced in Horizon in March 1942. In each, a seated figure appears oblivious of the encroaching vegetation, gnarled trunks and roots. Craxton’s lithographs for The Poet’s Eye (1944) likewise depict tin-helmeted figures, seated, lost in reverie amid moonlit landscapes, or half-concealed within trees.
By contrast, Dancer in a Landscape is lighter in mood. In the summer of 1943 Craxton travelled with Peter Watson and Graham Sutherland to St David’s Head in Pembrokeshire, where he sketched alongside Sutherland. As he recalled,
There were cloudless days and the land was reduced to basic elements of rocks, fig trees, gorse, the nearness of sea on all sides, a brilliant clear light. Everything was stripped away – all the verbiage, that is – to the essential sources of existence. ₂
This simplification is apparent in the clarity and lightness of Dancer in a Landscape. There is a joyous sense of movement in the depiction of the river, tussocks of grass, and soft shading of the figure, as well as the delicately feathered tree and spidery clouds. Throughout the composition, Craxton seems to delight in the possibilities of mark-making, lightening with chalk and adding touches of green and sepia
₁ John Craxton, in ‘John Craxton: Paintings and Drawings 1941–1966’, exhibition catalogue (Whitechapel Art Gallery, 1967), p. 6.
₂ Craxton, ibid.
John Craxton
Landscape (Spetses, Greece), 1946
Mixed media & oil on paper
30.3 x 48 cm.
Signed and dated "10.10.46" lower left in ink
Provenance
Private collection, since 1950s
Osborne Samuel Gallery
Additional information
Craxton travelled to Spetses from Poros with friend, Lucian Freud, in the Autumn of 1946 to celebrate his 24th birthday. There Craxton plotted an abstracted landscape from which several gouaches were produced.
John Craxton
Sun, Cat and Bird, 1986-88
Acrylic tempera on canvas
34.3 x 49 cm.
Signed and dated 'Craxton 86-88', lower left
Provenance
Christopher Hull Gallery, London
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Holeman, Indiana, U.S.A. (acquired from the above in 1988)
Osborne Samuel, London
Exhibited
London, Christopher Hull Gallery, John Craxton Recent Work, October 4 – November 5, 1988
Additional information
John Craxton’s dialogue with Greece stretches from paintings made in the late 1940s, in which the liberation from wartime England is palpable, to radiant compositions such as Sun, Cat and Bird (1986–88). Craxton was drawn equally to the landscape and its people – sailors, priests, shepherds and dancers, whom he portrayed in charcoal studies or in paintings on canvas or board. The hedonistic tenor of his early encounters is encapsulated in a postcard from 1948, where Craxton wrote, ‘I am off again in a day to an island where lemons grow & oranges melt in the mouth & goats snatch the last fig leaves off small trees the corn is yellow and russles [sic] & the sea is harplike on volcanic shores’.[1]
Sun, Cat and Bird splinters elements of this landscape into a mythical, sun-drenched scene. Sun electrifies the fur on the cat’s tail and haunches; the cat stalks its quarry through tangled rock and vegetation; the bird realises too late its fate. Craxton’s deep admiration for Byzantine mosaics is evident in the tessellation of the imagery and jewel-like colours that shimmer across the composition.
[1] Postcard to E.Q. Nicholson, quoted in Ian Collins, John Craxton (London: Lund Humphries, 2011), p. 99.
Adrian Heath
Oval Motif, 1958
Oil on canvas
91.5 x 71 cm.
Signed, titled and dated verso
Provenance
The Artist
The Estate of the Artist
Osborne Samuel, London
Private Collection, UK (purchased from the above 2012)
Additional information
Heath conjures an abstract composition dominated by an internal splintered oval – the classic format of the society portrait head – and an earthy, warm brown and ochre colour scheme. Heath’s origins as a landscape painter versed in a Slade ethos, in which analytic and even constructional drawing ruled, developed during his subsequent teaching career to a point where he adopted the motif of the life-room reclining or moving figure. The figure was, however, less naturalistic than a mere cipher for an independent and plastic structural vision.
Heath’s membership of the Fitzroy Street Constructionist group was pivotal and, where the Nine Abstract Artists group was concerned, he acted as a moderating link between the purist or concretist wing and the St. Ives-associated artists who, as Alloway remarked, employed “irrational expression by malerisch means”. The well-informed Heath was a sophisticated artist who, in his book ‘Abstract Painting: Its Origin and Meaning’, divided modern painting into the branches of formal and geometric (cubism) on the one hand and expressively romantic or subjective on the other.
Heath appears to have taken an ambivalent line within this dichotomy for, though his sensual surfaces are painterly and textured there is always a sense the fractured asymmetry of his forms are the logical outcome of implicit divisional order and planned planar cadence. A man of largely independent means, Heath conducted his art career with a gentile grace, relatively carefree that the full depth and subtlety of his painting would only come to full light through the long-term perspective of historical hindsight and reassessment.
Sean Henry
Untitled (Man Waiting), 2023
Bronze and oil paint
78 x 42 x 42 cm.
Edition of 6
Ivon Hitchens
Yellow Autumn from a Terrace, 1948
Oil on canvas
52.1 x 107.2 cm.
Signed 'Hitchens', lower right; Further signed and inscribed 'IVON HITCHENS/Greenleaves Lavington Common/ Petworth Sussex/Yellow Autumn/from a Terrace' on a label attached to the stretcher
Provenance
The Leicester Galleries, London, 2 February 1962
Private Collection, U.K.
Osborne Samuel Gallery
Additional information
Woodland became a key feature of Hitchens’ paintings from the early 1940s onwards, following the family’s move to Lavington Common, Sussex, after his studio in Belsize Park was badly damaged by a bomb. This was a turning point for the artist, having escaped London to the seclusion and tranquillity of the countryside and surrounded by nature, his work took on a fresh spontaneity that is particularly evident in this painting.
Peter Khoroche noted:
“About Yellow Autumn from a Terrace -there is a note in IH’s Despatch Book, under Summer 1949, to the effect that certain pictures from the Leicester Galleries were transferred to the Leger Galleries at this time. Among these was Yellow Autumn from a Terrace. So we can be sure that it was painted before Summer 1949. I think ‘ca.1948’ would be a reasonable guess as to when it was painted.”
Taking a horizontal canvas, often propped low in front of him, Hitchens worked in the open air from landscapes hemmed close by foliage, bracken and the dank mass of water. He had moved to Greenleaves, six acres of woodland in Lavington, Sussex, following the bombing of his London studio. Never finding a reason to leave, he continued to paint its seasons, finding infinite variety where others might hardly register change.
Hitchens frequently drew analogy with music to describe his approach to painting, referring to the instruments in the ‘ painter’ s orchestra’ , a picture’ s rhythm and harmony, or the notation of tones and colours necessary to its ‘ visual music’ .1 Yet if his canvases are scanned, in the same way as musical scores, the attentive viewer soon notices that Hitchens’ calligraphic strokes are precise rather than bravura , the balancing of tone to unpainted canvas as calculated as that of an experienced orchestrator.
In Yellow Autumn from a Terrace , Hitchens creates a foreground scaffolding of tree trunks, arched brambles, shrubs, the suggested curlicues of ironwork, letting the eye find its own way towards chinks of cerulean-grey. As Christopher Neve wrote,
“…nature seemed to consist to [Hitchens] more of spaces than of objects, and it often appears that he instinctively drew the air and light that vibrates in the interstices of the view rather than the view itself.”2
1. Ivon Hitchens, Statement in Ark (1956), based on notes made a decade earlier.
2. Christopher Neve, ‘ Ivon Hitchens: Music’ , in Unquiet Landscape: Places and Ideas in 20th Century English Painting (Faber, 1990), p. 139.
Bernard Meadows
Large ‘Jesus’ Crab (Larger Spider Crab), 1952-4
Bronze
32.7 x 29 x 22.5 cm.
Arts Council label on base from the 1965 tour
Edition of 6
Provenance
The Artist, until 1965
Private Collection, UK
Osborne Samuel, London
Literature
John Rothenstein, British Art Since 1900 , Phaidon, London, 1962, pl.145 (ill.b&w, another cast, where dated 1952)
Alan Bowness, Bernard Meadows, Sculpture and Drawings , Lund Humphries, London, 1995, p.138, cat.no.BM28
Exhibited
British Pavilion, XXXII Biennale 1964, Venice, unnumbered, (ill.b&w, another cast as Crab, where dated 1952)
Amsterdam, Stedelijk Museum, Roger Hilton, Gwyther Irwin, Bernard Meadows, Joe Tilson , 13 May-21 June 1965, unnumbered (this cast, where dated 1952); this exhibition travelled to Zagreb, Modern Gallery, Berlin, Kunstamt Reinickendorf, Museen der Stadt Recklinghausen and Kunstverein Braunschweig (this cast)
Additional information
A key figure of post-war British sculpture, Bernard Meadows came to prominence as part of what is now referred to as the ‘Geometry of Fear’ generation of sculptors. He exhibited internationally throughout his career and is now represented in the permanent collections of major museums such as the Guggenheim, Hirshhorn and Tate.
Following a very brief and unsuccessful spell as a trainee accountant, Meadows enrolled at the Norwich School of Art aged 19. In his second year it was arranged for three selected students to pay a visit to Henry Moore’s Hampstead studio. Moore, so impressed by Meadows, sent him a postcard the following day asking if he may like to assist him for the upcoming Easter holidays. Meadows gladly accepted and, bar the war years, he would remain Moore’s assistant until 1948. During the war Meadows volunteered for the Royal Air Force and in 1943 was posted to India, including an extended period on the Cocos Islands in the Indian Ocean. Counting surrealism and Picasso amongst his early influences and having learnt both the craft and sensibilities required of a sculptor from Moore, it was Meadows’ experience of these islands, and particularly their wildlife, which was to become an important marker in developing his own artistic development. The Cocos have a prevalent community of all manner of crabs which fascinated Meadows; tree crabs, large tank crabs, mosquito crabs, which although must have seemed alien at first became a most familiar feature of day to day life.
Following the end of the war Meadows returned to Britain and although he initially continued to work for Moore, by 1950 he developed his own sculpture. At first these were biomorphic abstractions akin to Moore’s work but he quickly moved into new territory with abstracted bird forms and in 1952 his first crab (Black Crab, Tate, London). Like the present cast, these works are at first animal yet remain not entirely removed from the preceding humanoid forms thus allowing an interpretation of representation of the human experience. In 1951 Meadows featured in the Festival of Britain to acclaim but his presence on the international stage was very much cemented by his inclusion in the now fabled exhibition in the British Pavilion at the 1952 Venice Biennale, New Aspects of British Sculpture. This exhibition championed the work of Meadows and seven other young contemporaries (Adams, Armitage, Butler, Chadwick, Clarke, Paolozzi and Turnbull). These artists worked in a more rough and ready aesthetic than the then established mode and shared a common concern borne from memories of war horrors witnessed just years earlier and the fear induced by the developing Cold War. Herbert Read penned the catalogue introduction from which the nomenclature for the group derived:
These new images belong to the iconography of despair, or of defiance; and the more innocent the artist, the more effectively he transmits the collective guilt. Here are images of flight, or ragged claws ‘scuttling across the floors of silent seas’, of excoriated flesh, frustrated sex, the geometry of fear.
Belonging to this period is Large ‘Jesus’ Crab, so called as the first cast was acquired by Jesus College, Cambridge. The piece is believed to be based on the form of the male Fiddler crab; a fast-moving specimen, with a cocoon-like body, raised on angular legs and possessing two eyes on stalks (which Meadows’ has moved underneath) and one greatly outsized claw that it raises aloft in a mating display. It perfectly suits Meadow’s requirements for his representation of human concern; composed of hardened shell over tender flesh, in a state of both threat and defence.
The present cast remained in Meadows’ possession until at least 1965, and latterly entered the collection of Tony Paterson. Paterson was a lawyer and through his friendship with Bryan Robertson, who he met at Toynbee Hall in the 1950s, he became much involved with the contemporary art scene from the 1960s when it is thought that he acquired this sculpture. He provided legal advice to the Air Gallery, Space (an organization to provide studios for young artists), the New Contemporaries and was Honorary Solicitor to the Contempory Art Society. Casts of the half scaled maquette for the present work are in the collection of the Victoria Art Gallery, Bath and the Tate Gallery, London.
Denis Mitchell
Roseveor, 1985
Carved yew
59 x 12.75 x 12.75 cm.
Initialled, titled and dated, underside of wooden base
Provenance
The artist’s family
Osborne Samuel, London
Literature
Illustrated Newlyn Art Gallery, Newlyn (1985)
Exhibited
Newlyn Art Gallery, Newlyn (1985)
Crane Kalman Gallery, London (1986)
Gillian Jason Gallery, London (1990)
Bridge Gallery, Dublin (1997)
Penwith Gallery, St Ives (1996)
Additional information
The context of St Ives, where Denis Mitchell lived from 1930 until the late 1960s, was critical to his creative development. Trained as a painter, he undertook piecemeal employment as his young family grew, working as a market gardener, fisherman and tin miner. In 1949 he became principal assistant to Barbara Hepworth, and that same year he carved the work he regarded as his first sculpture. Ballet Dancer, which was admired by Ben Nicholson, abstracts gently from the human form, rendering it as two stacked rhomboids, pierced to indicate the dancer’s angled legs and raised arms. From some angles a body is clearly discernible, but as it turns, the outline dissolves into abstraction, to become an exquisitely balanced combination of forms.
In 1952 Mitchell’s work was exhibited in ‘The Mirror and the Square’, at the New Burlington Galleries in London, alongside sculpture by Hepworth, Chadwick and Caro. The exhibition aimed to explore the urgent issues of realism versus abstraction, although its extent and diversity proved too great for most to draw any firm conclusions. Yet Mitchell’s adherence to abstraction was already clear. During his ten years as Hepworth’s principal assistant, he would hone his instinct for carving and the purity of form, exploring the abstract implications of enfolding, modular or asymmetrical structures, even when his titles implied figurative origins.
When Mitchell turned to bronze in the 1960s, by necessity using a local sand-casting foundry at St Just, he brought a remarkable degree of sophistication to the process, filing and polishing the somewhat rough casts to create sculptures that were both elegant and aesthetically unified. Patrick Heron, in his introduction to Mitchell’s exhibition at the Marjorie Parr Gallery in 1969, wrote,
… a Mitchell is a form, usually a single, rather streamlined form, enclosed as it were by a single skin … In such art, intuition and intellect are always inextricably locked. ₁
Roseveor (1985), a woodcarving, exemplifies this premise. The split monolith appeared as a formal device in Mitchell’s work in the early 1960s, around the same time that John Hoskin (like Mitchell, a one-time member of the artists’ cricket team at St Ives) was also exploring its form. Hoskin used welded steel to create a series of linear split columns. Mitchell, essentially a carver, created volumetric forms which curve and taper, ‘conceived’, as Heron recalled, ‘under the maker’s hand’. ₂
Mitchell had worked with assistants since the early 1960s, among them Breon O’Casey. By the mid-1980s his assistant was Tommy Rowe, like Mitchell a fisherman, a sculptor and former assistant to Hepworth. Mitchell returned to earlier sketchbooks for ideas, choosing those he now felt he could alter and perhaps improve. Roseveor thus relates to Argos (1974), as well as to Boscawen (1962), sculptures with an upright form and a characteristic ‘U’ or ‘V’ shape. Detecting in Mitchell’s sculpture an affinity with Nicholson, whose white reliefs were carved from a single piece of wood, then meticulously painted in coat after coat of Ripolin paint (‘always getting to the heart of things with practicalities’), O’Casey nonetheless discerned the greater influence of painters such as John Wells or Roger Hilton:
There is a shape of Roger Hilton’s, a large lump with two uneven horns, that you can see, for example in [Mitchell’s] Geevor, or Talland. ₃
Mitchell seldom used yew for his carvings, the only other known instance being Torso, dating from 1951. Yew possesses a characteristic warmth, orange-brown to purple in colour, with a natural lustre and pronounced grain that can be seen clearly in Roseveor. Consummately carved, Roseveor also evokes a primal quality, redolent of the non-western carvings Mitchell admired and collected.
₁ Patrick Heron, introduction to ‘Denis Mitchell: Exhibition of Sculpture’, exhibition catalogue (London: Marjorie Parr Gallery, 1969).
₂ Heron, introduction to ‘Denis Mitchell: Exhibition of Sculpture’.
₃ Breon O’Casey, in Denis Mitchell and Friends, exhibition catalogue (Dublin: The Bridge Gallery, 1997), p. 11.
Henry Moore
Family Group, 1945
Bronze
13 x 9.5 x 6 cm.
Edition of 7
Provenance
Brook Street Gallery, London
Roland Collection, London
Private Collection London
Thomas Gibson Fine Art, London
Sir Joseph Hotung, London
Osborne Samuel, London
Literature
Ionel Jianou, Henry Moore, Arted, Paris, 1968, no. 226, ill. p. 74 (another cast)
Giulio Carlo Argan, Henry Moore, New York, 1971, no. 77, ill. n.p. (another cast)
Giulio Carlo Argan, Le Grandi Monografie Scultori d’Oggi Moore, Fratelli Fabbri editori, Milan, 1971, no. 77, ill. p.37 (another cast)
David Sylvester (ed.), Henry Moore, Sculpture and Drawings 1921-1948, Lund Humphries, London, 1988, Vol I, cat. no. 239, p. 15
Exhibited
London, Roland, Browse and Delbanco, Henry Moore, 1948 (another cast)
York, York City Art Gallery, The Roland Collection, 1950, no. 35 (another cast)
Leicester, Museum and Art Gallery, The Roland Collection, 1950, no. 35 (another cast)
Bristol, City Art Gallery, Festival of Britain Exhibition, 1951, no. 43 (another cast)
Southampton Art Gallery, The Roland Collection, 1952 (another cast)
London, Geffry Museum, Works by Henry Moore, 1954 (another cast)
Leeds, Leeds City Art Gallery, The Roland Collection, 1962, no. 74 (another cast)
London, Camden Arts Centre, The Roland Collection, 1976, no. 82 (another cast)
Edinburgh, National Gallery of Modern Art, One Man’s Choice, 1985, no. 64 (another cast)
Additional information
From the edition of 7, plus 1. This bronze is recorded with the Henry Moore Foundation as LH 239, cast f.
A cast is held at the Smart Museum, Chicago USA. The terracotta original and a bronze cast is held by the Henry Moore Foundation, Much Hadham, UK. The larger version of this bronze, the so-called Stevenage Family Group, are held by the Tate, London, MOMA, New York, Hakone Open-Air Museum, Japan, the Norton Simon Museum, Pasadena & the Henry Moore Foundation, Much Hadham.
Before the war Moore was asked to create a work for a large progessive school in Impington. This lead to the idea of the Family Group and Moore made a series of Family Group maquettes, this cast being one of them. Moore discusses at length why this cast differs from the larger version which was eventually realised for the Barclay School in Stevenage:
The main differences between the two are in the heads, especially in the head of the man. In the small version (this bronze) the split head of the man gives a vitality and interest necessary to the composition, particularly as all three heads have only slight indications for features. When it comes to the life-size version, (the Family Group in Stevenage) the figures each becomes more obviously human and related to each other and the split head of the man became impossible for it was so unlike the woman and child. (There is a different connection between things which are three feet from each other, as the large heads are, and things which one sees in the same field of vision only two or three inches apart).
Henry Moore
Maquette for Draped Reclining Figure, 1952
Bronze
10.6 x 17 x 8 cm.
Edition of 10
Edition of 10
Provenance
The Artist
Jeffrey Loria, New York
Private Collection, New York
Robert Landau, Canada
Private Collection, Canada
Osborne Samuel, London
Literature
David Sylvester (ed.) and Herbert Read, Henry Moore. Complete Sculpture, 1949-54, vol. II, London, 1986, no.335
Additional information
The Henry Moore Foundation have recorded this cast in their archives as cast g.
Maquette for Draped Reclining Figure (1952) relates to a large-scale bronze commissioned for the roof terrace of the Time-Life building in Bond Street, London. This was the first of Moore’s sculptures to use ridged surfaces to suggest the folds of clothing. As he recalled in 1954, the approach derived from depicting drapery in his wartime shelter drawings, an experience that ‘gave me the intention, sometime or other, to use drapery in sculpture in a more realistic way than I had ever tried to use it in my carved sculpture.’[1]
Swathing the figure emphasises the points of tension within its form: where limbs bend, or where shoulders, breasts or thighs push outwards. Conversely, it indicates areas of slackness, such as between the knees where fabric hangs loosely. Much more than a decorative addition, drapery allowed Moore to connect his figures with the folds of landscape, specifically ‘mountains, which are the crinkled skin of earth.’[2] In the small-scale maquette, the tactile, roughened surfaces – rendered provisionally rather than acutely – lend the figure a powerful sense of mystery.
[1] Henry Moore, in Sculpture in the Open Air, exh.cat., Holland Park, London, 1954, reprinted in Alan Wilkinson (ed.), Henry Moore: Writings and Conversations (Aldershot: Lund Humphries, 2002), p. 28.
[2] Moore, ibid.
Another cast is held in The Bruce Museum, Connecticut, USA
Henry Moore
Reclining Nude: Crossed Feet, 1980
Bronze
8.8 x 16 x 9 cm.
Signed and numbered on the artist's base
Edition of 9
Provenance
The Goodman Gallery, South Africa
Private Collection, London (acquired from the above in 1981)
Thence by descent
Osborne Samuel, London
Literature
Alan Bowness (ed.), Henry Moore, Complete Sculpture: 1980-86, Vol. 6, London, 1988, no. 788, another cast illustrated, p. 36-37
Exhibited
Collegeville, Pennsylvania, Ursinus College, Philip and Muriel Berman Museum of Art, Henry Moore Relationships, Drawings, Prints & Sculpture from the Muriel and Philip Berman Collection, 1993-1994 (another cast).
Philadelphia Museum of Art, Henry Moore, A Centennial Salute, An Exhibition in Celebration of Philip I. Berman, July-November 1998, no. 18 (illustrated, p. 30) (another cast).
Additional information
A cast from the edition is owned by the Henry Moore Foundation.
In John Hedgecoe’s seminal book on the artist, Moore states, “from the very beginning the reclining figure has been my main theme.’₁ This subject is central to Moore’s creativity throughout his career. In his own words, “the reclining figure gives the most freedom, compositionally and spatially… A reclining figure can recline on any surface. It is free and stable at the same time. It fits in with my belief that sculpture should be permanent, should last for eternity.” ₂
Reclining Nude: Crossed Feet is an iconic sculpture. The initial impetus for the posture of the woman was inspired by the Chacmool figures which the artist first saw at the British Museum in the 1920s; the arms perpendicular to the ground, the knees raised and the twisting contours of the body. However in Moore’s Reclining Figures, the masculine rain god of the Chacmool has been, in William Packer’s words, ‘transformed into an image more general, unhieratic and benign, as a simple function of the softer, rounded forms that came with the change of sex, and the humanising informality of the relaxed and turning body.’ ₃
The crossed feet and hands are abbreviations of the limbs, an extension of the contradictory, relaxed torsion in the body. The contours of the sculpture evoke, as Moore noted, the disparate and enigmatic contours of the landscape, opening up voids beneath the shoulders and under the arms, echoed in the arching of the legs. The sculpture can thus be seen in the round, each angle stimulates a new and perhaps surprising interpretation.
₁ John Hedgecoe, Henry Moore, published by Nelson, New York, 1968, p. 151
₂ Henry Moore cited in J.D. Morse, ‘Henry Moore Comes to America’, Magazine of Art, vol.40, no.3, March 1947, pp.97–101, reprinted in Philip James (ed.), Henry Moore on Sculpture, London 1966, p.264.
₃ Celebrating Moore, selected by David Mitchinson, published by Lund Humphries, 1998, p.125, extract written by William Packer
Henry Moore
Reclining Girl, 1983
Bronze
8.6 x 7.6 x 12.4 cm.
Signed 'Moore' and numbered from the edition, on the back of the base.
Edition of 9
Provenance
Galerie Patrick Cramer, Geneva (acquired from the artist, 1984)
Private Collection, purchased from the above in April 1984.
Private Collection, London
Osborne Samuel, London
Literature
Alan Bowness, ed., Henry Moore: Complete Sculpture, 1980-1986, London, 1988, vol. 6, cat. no. 901, pp. 58-59 (ill b&w p.59 and pl. 126).
Henry Moore
Reclining Figures, 1943
Pencil, charcoal, wax crayons, pen, ink & wash on paper
45.6 x 64.7 cm.
Signed & dated lower left 'Moore 43' & with various inscriptions by the artist
Provenance
Private Collection, Chicago (acquired before 1950 & thence by descent)
Private Collection, USA
Literature
Ann Garrould (ed.), Henry Moore, Complete Drawings, vol.3, 1940-49, Aldershot, 2001, no.AG43.107; HMF 2156, ills.p.196
Exhibited
Stanford, Iris & B Gerald Cantor Centre for Visual Arts, Stanford University, on loan, March 2000
Additional information
This drawing is reminiscent of a work from the same period Reclining Figures: Ideas for Stone Sculpture, 1944, in which each figure appears in an individual pod in a subterranean setting, recalling the mysterious fascination that caves in hillsides and cliffs held for the artist. Moore’s interest in underground landscapes had previously been expressed in his ‘Shelter Drawings’ series of 1941, depicting figures taking refuge in the London Underground during the Blitz, and in his coal mining drawings of the same year.
Henry Moore
Women Winding Wool, c.1948
Pencil, wax crayon, coloured crayon, watercolour wash, pen and ink
24.8 x 24.1 cm.
Signed and dated 'Moore 48' lower right. Also inscribed 'Top lighting' lower centre
Provenance
Curt Valentin, New York
Alma Morgenthau Wertheim, New York
Anne Wertheim Werner, New York
Thence by descent
Osborne Samuel, London
Literature
Ann Garrould, ed., Henry Moore Complete Drawings 1950-76, vol. III, Much Hadham, 2001, no. AG 47-49.63, p. 273, illustrated
Additional information
The two seated figures in Women Winding Wool (c.1948) are engaged in an age-old task: rhythmically transferring yarn from hank to ball. We might imagine the women’s arms in motion – tilting, coiling and pulling the wool taut – as they engage in conversation or reflection. The process is as companionable and soothing as it is mundane.
Moore’s drawing, one of several of the subject made at this date,[1] gives a valuable insight into his working methods. The figures are drawn in pen and ink. Clustered lines indicate shadow or depth; their absence creates highlights. Through colour, a sense of an interior is conveyed, albeit without detail: this plain setting, with its square stools and bare floor, might be anywhere from a miner’s cottage in Yorkshire to ancient Greece. Between the figures is a network of pen marks suggesting a transfer of energy. The squared grid overlaying the image indicates that Moore was contemplating a further transformation of the image, whether through enlargement or translation to another medium.
[1] The Arts Council Collection contains a larger drawing of Women Winding Wool (1948), in watercolour, pencil and chalk, 54.2 x 56.3 cm, AC 24.
John Piper
Rocky Sheepfold, Late 1940's
Gouache and pen and ink on paper
51.44 x 66.04 cm.
Signed, lower right; titled verso
Provenance
Private Collection, USA
Additional information
In 1943 Piper received a commission to document a slate quarry inside the mountain of Manod Mawr, north Wales, where the collections of the National Gallery were sent for safe storage during the war. While the interior proved too dark to draw, Piper took the opportunity to explore the region, using John Murray’s Handbook for Travellers in North Wales (1898) as his guide.
Returning to Snowdonia in the summer of 1945, he discovered and rented ‘Pentre’, a cottage halfway down the Nant Ffrancon valley, through which a river runs, and to which, at the time, there was an unmade track barely passable in winter. Piper acquainted himself with the geology of the area by reading A.C. Ramsay’s The Old Glaciers of Switzerland and North Wales (1860) and by drawing the mountains repeatedly, thereby beginning to notice how rocks near to hand often resembled the contours of those in the distance. Writing to Paul Nash in November 1945, he described a gale ‘which made the clouds whirl round the mountains in circles and lifted the water off the river in spray’, adding, ‘I hope you will see the place one day.’¹
It is likely that Rocky Sheepfold, which resembles Piper’s photographs of a drystone enclosure in the Nant Ffrancon valley, relates to the landscape near this cottage.² The painting balances topographical detail against broad washes of tone, evoking the mood of lithographs commissioned for the poetry volume English Scottish and Welsh Landscape (1944), described in a review as ‘sinister … livid and menacing’.³ To the perimeter of Rocky Sheepfold, scattered stones extrude from the grass; larger boulders shelter and form part of the enclosure. Elemental and windswept, it demonstrates an opportunistic intervention into the landscape.
¹ Frances Spalding, John Piper, Myfanwy Piper: Lives in Art (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2009), p. 267–8.
² John Piper, photographs of sheepfold in Nant Ffrancon, Caernarvonshire (c. 1930s–1980s), black and white negatives, Tate Archive TGA 8728/3/3/10–11.
³ English Scottish and Welsh Landscape 1700–c. 1860, verse chosen by John Betjeman and Geoffrey Taylor, with original lithographs by John Piper (London: Frederick Muller Ltd, 1944); The Studio (December 1944), p. 192.
John Piper
Tryfan, 1950
Oil on canvas
63.5 x 76.2 cm.
Signed 'John Piper', lower right
Provenance
The Artist
Marlborough Fine Art, London, April 1983
Private Collection, U.K. (acquired from the above)
Exhibited
Pittsburgh, The Carnegie International, March – June 1950
Additional information
Around 1947, Piper rented Bodesi, a house facing the mountain of Tryfan in the Ogwen Valley of Snowdonia. This was not the first place where the family had stayed in Wales: in 1945 Piper rented a cottage named Pentre, in the Nant Ffrancon valley, which was prone to flooding and reached by a track that became impassable in poor weather. Bodesi was available only outside the summer months, accounting for Piper’s often stormy depictions of the landscape. As Piper recalled, ‘for the first time I saw the bones and structure and the lie of the mountains, living with them and climbing them as I was, lying on them in the sun and getting soaked with rain in their cloud cover and enclosed in their improbable, private rock-world in fog’.[1]
Tryfan, the fifteenth-highest mountain in Wales, is easily recognised by its conical, jagged profile. In Piper’s painting, it dominates a landscape raked by low sun, revealing the texture and detail of rocks, scree and boulder fields.
[1] John Piper, in Richard Ingrams and John Piper, Piper’s Places (London: Chatto & Windus, 1986), p. 105.
Alan Reynolds
Moth Barn Interior 3, 1952
Oil on board
34.9 x 47.6 cm.
Signed verso
Provenance
Redfern Gallery, London
Dr Lederman, 1953 (purchased from the above)
Piccadilly Gallery, London
HJE Haggard, 1961 (purchased from the above)
Private Collection, UK
Exhibited
Alan Reynolds, Redfern Gallery, London, 1953
Additional information
Moth Barn in the Fenlands of East Anglia is a subject Reynolds often returned to. There are several recorded versions of the same view including a watercolour in the Fitzwilliam, Cambridge. One of the three finished oil paintings is in the collection of the Art Gallery of South Australia.
Alan Reynolds’ solo exhibition at the Redfern Gallery, in February 1953, consolidated an impressive early reputation, featuring landscapes of abstracted trees and foliage: compositions formalised into ‘silhouettes of almost Chinese assurance and decisiveness’.¹ Even before the exhibition opened, Sir Kenneth Clark had reserved the large-scale painting, Moth Barn II, September Morning (1952), for the Art Gallery of South Australia.
Reynolds made numerous paintings on the theme of ‘moth barn’, in addition to a lithograph dating from 1956. Moth Barn Interior 3 (1952) is a diminutive variation, beautifully composed from a mirroring of spiked and curved foliage, whose palette suggests winter: chalk whites and greys, with a leavening of green. Here, landscape is reduced to its bare bones, stripped of unnecessary or lush detail. Yet it is also eloquent, built upon a series of curves derived from a seed pod, expectant in the foreground. First bought in 1953 by Dr Manuel Lederman, a pioneer in the field of radiology, the painting was later acquired by the geologist H. J. E. Haggard.
¹ M.H. Middleton, ‘Alan Reynolds (Redfern)’, The Spectator (13 March 1953).
Bridget Riley
Rising and Falling Curve with Turquoise, Cerise, Olive and Black, 1974
Gouache and pencil on paper
146 x 51 cm.
Signed and dated in pencil lower right, titled lower left in pencil
Provenance
Rowan Gallery, London (#R1302)
Private Collection, New York (from the above in 1975)
Scolar Fine Art, London (before 2004)
Private Collection, UK (before 2004)
Osborne Samuel, London
Literature
Diamond Lil: Lilian Somerville, The Woman Behind the Post-War British Art Boom, by Judith LeGrove, Published by Osborne Samuel, 2022, p. 130 (includes text contributed by Bridget Riley)
Additional information
The curve form was a fundamental part of Bridget Riley’s work since the early 1960s. They were incorporated into several of her most significant achievements during the first full decade of her career, when black emulsion predominated in her work: Current, 1964 (The Museum of Modern Art, New York), Arrest 2, 1965 (Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Kansas City, Missouri) and Exposure, 1966 (Linda and William Hermann Collection, Dallas) are three extremely fine examples. In all these paintings the curve is employed in different ways and with varying rhythms, or ‘change of pace’ as Riley herself described. When considering Rising and Falling Curve with Turquoise, Cerise, Olive and Black (1974) with its long, slow curves it is with Arrest 2 that the closest affinity can be found. Taking the colour element aside, the paintings which are vertical in structure integrate softly undulating curves which never meet, thus creating space between them which allows the compositions to breathe. The units themselves change in width as the eye is drawn both upwards and downwards (Rising and Falling) through the image, to create a destabilising, asymmetrical effect, enhancing their expressive character.
In conversation with Paul Moorhouse, when asked, ‘What is distinctive about the curve as a formal element?’ Bridget Riley explained, ‘Well, in my case the curve is very much a “made” thing. You could say that a square has a great many cultural references. A square is a man-made shape – a very basic one – and as a result very familiar. It must go back to the time when man began to make something, plan something or construct something, but the curve is not defined…It gives me exceptional freedom. Its range is wider and bigger; it can still be a curve when it is doing really quite surprising things’. 1
Whilst tonal gradations were introduced by Riley to her Arrest 2 painting, softening the stark contrasting elements of her pure black and white works, it was not until 1967, with Cataract 2, that the use of colour became a staple in her fields of curves. Speaking further with Paul Moorhouse, Riley noted, ‘I knew that colour was one of my goals. But it is very complex, very difficult and, pictorially, a great challenge. This was clearly realised from the early days of Modern Art. Colour has always posed a great challenge, but I also knew that you had to stalk this particular quarry with great care.’ 2
This ‘great care’ is much in evidence with Rising and Falling Curve with Turquoise, Cerise, Olive and Black where Riley juxtaposes a perfect harmony of warm colours, typical of her palette choice during the mid-1970s. The pink, blue and green are punctuated at intervals by four twisting lines of black which serve to accentuate the depth of the image. It is these elements especially which Riley linked to movement in a standing human figure, and in particular their sensuality. Yet in parallel with this, the feelings and emotions evoked by certain colours being conjoined was of paramount importance to the artist, and with Rising and Falling Curve with Turquoise, Cerise, Olive and Black these are very much ones of joy and warmth.
Ultimately, Riley found the curve both a successful and fulfilling motif. It would play a pivotal role in her work from 1974-80, after which vertical stripes came to the fore. Curves then re-surfaced in the late 1990s, and asked whether she was surprised to see them back, her succinct reply speaks volumes, ‘Well, not really. I was very happy because I had missed them for so long! And also, especially as I got going, a whole range of possibilities opened itself to me. The interaction of colours and curves seemed boundless.’ 3.
1.Bridget Riley in conversation with Paul Moorhouse, cited in Bridget Riley, The Curve Paintings 1961-2014, Ridinghouse in association with De La Warr Pavilion, Bexhill on Sea, 2015, (pp.43&47)
2. op.cit. p.47
3. op.cit. p.51
William Roberts
Bathers, 1923
Pencil
50.8 x 37.7 cm.
Signed, dated and titled indistinctly, 'William Roberts, 1923, Bathers', lower right
Provenance
Desmond Coke
Sotheby’s London, 23 July 1931
Christie’s London, 12 November 1987
Geoffrey Beene
His sale; Christie’s New York, 24 May 1994
Private Collection, U.K.
Osborne Samuel, London
Literature
Andrew Gibbon-Williams & Ruth Artmonsky, William Roberts & Jacob Kramer, The Tortoise and the Hare, Ben Uri Gallery, The London Jewish Museum of Art, London, 2003, ill.p.10
Exhibited
Leeds, University Gallery, William Roberts and Jacob Kramer: The Tortoise and the Hare, 30 April – 20 June 2003; toured to London, Ben Uri Art Gallery, 7 July – 7 September 2003, ill.p.10
Additional information
The original owner of Bathers, Desmond Coke (1897-1931), was a British writer commissioned into the 10th (Service) Battalion of the Loyal North Lancashire Regiment in October 1914. At the Western Front, as Adjutant of the Regiment, he was responsible for writing up the Battalion diary. Eventually invalided out of the army after contracting trench fever in May 1916, he went on to write adventure stories for boys under the pseudonym Belinda Blinders. He also collaborated with the artist John Nash, who illustrated his 1921 book, The Nouveau Poor. Coke may well have been friends with William Roberts and will certainly have been aware of the latter’s significant World War I commissions received from the Canadian Memorials Fund and the British Ministry of Information.
Drawn in 1923, it has been suggested (by the William Roberts Society) that Bathers was probably exhibited in Roberts’ first one-man exhibition, Paintings and Drawings by William Roberts at the Chenil Gallery, London in November 1923. An untraced work from this show, titled Sea Frolic, would seem to match Bathers, and further drawings in the exhibition are known to be inscribed with titles which are not consistent with the exhibition catalogue.
Following Coke’s death in 1931, Bathers was offered for sale at Sotheby’s where it disappeared into an unknown collection, until it re-appeared again at auction, in the 1980s. The drawing then entered the collection of Geoffrey Beene (1924-2004), one of New York’s most famous fashion designers in the 1960s and 1970s, who was recognised for his artistic and technical skills. Latterly, it was in the collection of Ruth Artmonsky, gallerist and curator of William Roberts & Jacob Kramer, the Tortoise and the Hare, staged at Ben Uri Gallery, London, and the University Gallery, Leeds, in 2003, in which Bathers featured (cat.no.16).
Commenting on the artist’s Chenil Gallery exhibition in 1923, Gibbon Williams states, ‘Roberts’ first solo exhibition was a heavyweight spectacle. It comprised nearly sixty works – paintings, drawings and prints…Muirhead Bone’s catalogue introduction was especially perspicacious. It pinpointed the very qualities that marked Roberts out from the generality of his contemporaries: his “boldness”, “mordant irony” and “sense of design”. “A strong love of character at it raciest” Bone wrote, “especially where it shades into the grotesque – he presents to us his memories of life in a sharp manner, odd, vivid, and quite his own, whose foundation is a really sterling draughtsmanship.”’1
Whilst Bathers has been lightly squared for transfer, it is possible Roberts abandoned the oil painting. An oil on canvas, titled The Bathers and dated to circa 1925 bears little resemblance to this drawing, in which all of the figures are standing, and appear to be engaged in a loose and joyous procession or dance around the central figure, not dissimilar in compositional design to the right-hand side of The Dance Club (The Jazz Party) painted in the same year and now with Leeds Museums and Galleries, City Art Gallery, Leeds. Whilst it is tempting to draw parallels with Cézanne and his bathers, Roberts doesn’t depict the group of nude figures as a formal exercise as Cézanne would have, but as was often the case with Roberts there seems to be an underlying narrative idea, although intriguingly one that is not explained. That the figures in the drawing are unclothed seem to give Bathers a Dionysian element. However, considering the tailpiece drawings that Roberts produced for Seven Pillars of Wisdom in 1925–26 several of them such as A Reluctant Shepherd and Male and Female feature unclothed figures where the nudity seems to be driven purely by design elements rather than any relevance to the narrative. The bodies, arms and legs of the eight figures depicted in Bathers are entwined in a complex arrangement of angles and curves, with a heavy use of pencil and subtle shading, which recalls the artist’s own earlier forays in Cubist experimentation, as seen in his studies on paper for the now lost Two Step (1915).
Referring to Roberts’ work dating from the early 1920s, Gibbon Williams remarks, ‘While fidelity to the visual truth of a specific event is rarely sacrificed to formal requirements, his drawings and paintings of this period are an example of Cubism being manipulated with realistic intent.’2 It is this quasi-Cubist aesthetic which Roberts embraced during the early 1920s which makes Bathers, and other drawings from his significant 1923 Chenil Gallery show so appealing.
1. Andrew Gibbon William, William Roberts, an English Cubist, Lund Humphries, 2004, p.68
2. op. cit. p.60
Edward Seago
Thames from Lambeth Bridge, Circa 1973
Oil on Canvas
78 x 64 cm.
Signed 'Edward Seago', lower right
Provenance
Private collection, South Africa
Thence by descent
Osborne Samuel, London
Additional information
Bedridden for several years during childhood, the Norwich-born artist Edward Seago began to paint scenes from his bedroom window. He later rebelled against this restrictive experience by joining a circus, travelling and sailing, including a voyage to Antarctica in 1956–7, all of which provided inspiration for his paintings. Seago served in the Royal Engineers in World War II, and after being invalided out in 1944 was invited to document the Italian Campaign. In 1953 he was appointed as official artist of the Coronation.
Stylistically, Seago drew sustenance from the English landscape tradition: from the Norwich School of Artists, Alfred Munnings, and above all John Constable. Thames from Lambeth Bridge (c.1973) is characteristic of his mature style in its impressionistic approach, deftly conveying the play of light on water, the breadth of the river and London’s architecture, veiled by distance and the city’s haze.
William Scott
(Abstract Painting), 1959
Oil on canvas
40.8 x 45.7 cm.
Provenance
Estate of the artist and thence by descent
Literature
William Scott Catalogue Raisonné of Oil Paintings , 2013, edited by Sarah Whitfield: No.394 Volume 2
Additional information
This painting is unsigned, it was William Scott’s practice to only sign works when they were sold.
John Tunnard
Aerial Disturbance, 1946
Gouache on paper
36 x 55 cm.
Signed, dated and inscribed 'John Tunnard '46, W26', lower left
Provenance
The Artist
Lefevre Gallery, London, January 1947
Dalzell Hatfield Galleries, Los Angeles, U.S.A.
Private Collection, U.K. (purchased from the above, May 1980)
Literature
Alan Peat & Brian A. Whitton, John Tunnard: His Life and Work, Scolar Press, Aldershot, 1997, p. 178, cat. no. 522
Additional information
Serving as an auxiliary coastguard in Cornwall, during World War II, John Tunnard spent hours watching shipping at sea. His paintings are suffused with forms derived from or invented as a result of this experience: seascapes alive with objects resembling masts, rotors and weathervanes. In Aerial Disturbance (1946), Tunnard creates washes of colour to suggest sand, sea and sky, overlaid with spikes meshed with fronds of weed. Between the foreground and middle distance, strange white forms – hybrids of sea purses, sails or birds – fly from shore to sky.
John Tunnard
Threat, 1946
pencil and gouache on paper
36 x 55 cm.
Signed, dated and inscribed 'John Tunnard '46, W21', lower left
Provenance
The Artist
Lefevre Gallery, December 1946
Dalzell Hatfield Galleries, Los Angeles, U.S.A.
Private Collection, U.K. (purchased from the above, May 1980)
Literature
Alan Peat and Brian A. Whitton, John Tunnard: His Life and Work, Scolar Press, Aldershot, 1997, p. 177, cat. no. 516
Additional information
Having studied textile design at the Royal College of Art in the 1920s, Tunnard gained a reputation as one of the most distinctive British artists of the 1930s. His first major exhibition was held in March 1939 at Guggenheim Jeune, on Cork Street in London’s Mayfair. For the gallery’s owner, Peggy Guggenheim, Tunnard’s paintings were as ‘musical as Kandinsky’s, as delicate as Klee’s, and as gay as Miró’s.’[1] The artist Julian Trevelyan elaborated, conjuring Tunnard as a painter of surrealist bricolage, a ‘hot jazz king’ who transforms what he finds into ‘musical instruments … tightly strung with delicate wires in red and blue’.[2]
Tunnard’s painting, Threat (1946), melds pre-war surrealism with the wartime experience of serving as an auxiliary coastguard in Cornwall. Skeletal forms rear from the right of the composition towards funnels, around and across which wraps a ribbon resembling fish skin. The sky and palette are darkened; the nature of the ‘threat’ ominously ambiguous. Yet despite this, the composition retains a balletic grace, recalling Tunnard’s interest in music and skill as a jazz drummer.
[1] Peggy Guggenheim, Confessions of an Art Addict (London: Andre Deutsch, 1960), p. 19
[2] Julian Trevelyan, Introduction to the John Tunnard exhibition at Guggenheim Jeune, London Bulletin, issue 12 (15 March 1939).
William Turnbull
Female Figure, 1988, 1988
Bronze
190.5 x 101.6 x 50.8 cm.
Signed and numbered from the edition of 6
Edition of 6
Provenance
Waddington Galleries Ltd, London
Private Collection USA, purchased from the above in 1989
Osborne Samuel, London
Private Collection, Canada (purchased from the above in 2014)
Literature
Davidson, Amanda, The Sculpture of William Turnbull , published by Lund Humphries, 2005, p.175, no. 263
Exhibited
Waddington Galleries, Solo exhibition, 1991, cat 9 (illus. p.23)
Additional information
The idols Turnbull made in the 1980s revisit forms from the 1950s, demonstrating an essential seam within his sculptural thinking. Female Figure (1980) presents a vertical slab, scrolled at the top to suggest a head, gently scored towards the base to imply a robe. Arms become curved pipes, a counter-positioned wedge suggests feet, but the most salient feature is the figure’s breasts, implausibly and voluptuously placed.
The figure clearly suggests fertility: a goddess or idol, resonating with both ancient and more recent history. In rituals – whether pagan or religious – the chalice or jug is often equated with birth, as a parallel to the pregnant figure. One of the most significant transferences within modern sculpture is Germaine Richier’s L’Eau (1953), or Water, in which she incorporated the fragment of a terracotta amphora, found on a beach at Camargue, as the neck of a seated figure. The hooped handles of the vessel, just as the arms of Turnbull’s Female Figure, evoke a symbolic link to water, a source for life.
Slim in profile, despite its towering height and material heft, Female Figure evinces both grace and a sense of joyousness, expressed by its arms – curved, hand on hip, or open to embrace. There is a recapturing, too, of the spirit of Acrobat (1951), made at the beginning of Turnbull’s career, who balances exuberantly and fearlessly, arms outstretched.
William Turnbull
Blade Venus 1, 1989
Bronze
97.8 x 29.2 x 27.6 cm.
Stamped with the artist's monogram, numbered from the edition, dated and stamped with the foundry mark on the tip of the blade
Edition of 6
Provenance
The Artist
Waddington Galleries, London, May 11, 1987
Private Collection, USA
Thence by descent
Literature
Amanda A Davidson, The Sculpture of William Turnbull, published by the Henry Moore Foundation, 2005, no.267, p. 176
Exhibited
London, Serpentine Gallery, William Turnbull, 1995 (another cast);
London, Waddington Galleries, William Turnbull, 1998, cat no.1, p.16, illustrated p.17 (another cast);
London, Waddington Galleries, William Turnbull, 2004 illustrated p.32 (another cast);
London, Sotheby’s S|2, William Turnbull, 9 October – 17 November 2017, p.140, illustrated p.17 (another cast).
Additional information
‘The idea of metamorphosis in Turnbull’s work is at its most intense in the Blade Venus series. These large sculptures suggest the shapes of Chinese knives, Japanese Samurai swords, pens, paintbrushes, leaves and goddess figures in one elegant, slightly curved form. Their form and inspiration relate them to the Zen paintings that inspired Turnbull and to the calligraphic paintings, drawings and reliefs that he produced in the 1950s. Like a single gesture, with a wide and a thin section, they combine all of the breadth of the front view with the slenderness of the side view in one perception. Part of their ambiguity and their dynamic presence stems from the spectators’ simultaneous ability to see both the wide element and the narrow section as the handle or the blade or tip of the tool. Although they are absolutely still they are also balanced on their sharpest point, poised to act.’
(Amanda A. Davidson, The Sculpture of William Turnbull, Henry Moore Foundation & Lund Humphries, Aldershot, 2005, pp.72-73).
Keith Vaughan
The Working Party, 1942
Ink wash, pen and ink
35.5 x 51 cm.
Signed and dated 'Keith Vaughan 1942'
Provenance
Bonham’s: November 8. 2007
The Lefevre Gallery
Private Collection, U.K.
Additional information
Over the summer of 1942 No. 9 Company was given the task of clearing the grounds of Ashton Gifford House to which the Greenways Preparatory School children had been evacuated from Bognor Regis. Occasionally local children and school pupils joined in the task. The house was a three-story, Neo-Classical building whose extensive grounds were overrun with vegetation. The romantic setting inspired several paintings from Vaughan over the course of the next few years, including The Working Party, 1942, Tree Felling at Ashton Gifford, 1942/3 and The Garden at Ashton Gifford, 1944. Clearing the woodland not only offered the soldiers worthwhile community service but also provided fuel for the barrack room stoves. Dozens of trees were felled using little more than chopping axes and then cut up into regulation-sized logs with handsaws. It was blistering employment especially so in the hot summer months.
Vaughan made dozens of sketches of his company’s activities in his sketchbook, usually in pen and ink and sometimes in pencil. He seems to have been particularly thorough in his preparations for The Working Party which is among his most ambitious wartime images. He filled several sketchbooks with rapidly executed studies, some drawn at great speed to capture the dynamism of the figures splitting and hauling branches. Further drawings depict the men chopping and sawing, dragging enormous boughs and logs, loading lorries and, occasionally, taking well-earned breaks. Despite the exhaustion, Vaughan found aesthetic values in his surroundings, enough to write about it to his friend, the painter Norman Towne:
…white and ochre branches plunging down into the oceanic surging of tangled nettles. People walking through the waist-high grass, through the aqueous leaf-green shadow, arms full of dead wood…and the wall running as an indefatigable horizontal, losing and finding itself in the jungle of weed and ivy…I wanted to capture this in lassoes of line and nets of colour, but it’s more difficult than writing about it. (Letter to Norman Towne, October 12, 1942)
The felled trees dwarf the men whose formidable task is carried out beneath a dark canopy of dense foliage described in translucent sepia ink washes. The walls are overgrown, here and there with ivy, in true Neo-Romantic style. On the walls and foreground passages Vaughan has used an orange tint. This has the effect of warming up what is a monochromatic, and somewhat menacing scene. The high wall surrounding the estate supplies the necessary geometrical stability from which to hang this composition. The lines describing the figures, with their rolled-up sleeves, overlay the tree boughs, indicating that they were added at a later stage.
Keith Vaughan
An Orchard by the Railway, 1945
Pen, ink, wash and gouache on paper
29 x 38 cm.
Signed and dated in pencil in the lower right of the painting. Inscribed on verso 'An orchard by the railway' / 'Gouache 1945' by the artist.
Provenance
Gift from Vaughan to his friend the American artist Bernard Perlin (1918-2014)
Sir Jeffrey Tate
Additional information
For the later part of the war Vaughan was stationed at Eden Camp, near Malton, in Yorkshire. Army life precluded him setting up a functioning studio in his barracks. Despite this significant limitation, he was determined to continue painting and reduced both the scale and the materials with which he worked. He produced a series of small paintings in gouache with additions of mixed media and described this combination as ‘ a volatile medium’ .
Vaughan’ s paintings from this period record his daily life in the army, the landscape around him and, occasionally, the activities of the local farmers, sowers and fruit-pickers. Schoolboys and young children also feature in his compositions, frequently accompanied by older figures, (see Yorkshire Lane with Figures, 1945, Orchard Scene with Boys Wrestling, 1945, Man and Child on the Moors, 1946). Here the two boys have been gathering fruit from the apple tree behind them. One has filled his wheelbarrow and the other holds his crop of fruit in his hands. An old man accompanies them, his walking stick in one hand as he raises up his other hand in surprise. All three have stopped in their tracks and look towards us, as though we have startled them. This viewer interaction is notable since it is an uncommon feature in Vaughan’ s work. The reason for it is explained in a letter from him to John Minton written from Eden Camp in July 1945:
Actually I’ ve been sparring around with some paintings lately. There’ s a wheelbarrow full of weeds and two people. The sun is shining. There is a gardener and two children in an orchard looking up at a passing train…here are the ochre and umber washes. Here comes the nervous sensitive line.
Translucent inky washes in the background contrast with the more detailed passages of drawing on the figures and tree. We are reminded of the ink drawings and paintings of trees and orchards by Samuel Palmer that were such an influence on the Neo-Romantic painters at this time. However, there is something more disturbing and unsettling in Vaughan’ s. Paintings such as An Orchard by the Railway contain neurotic atmospheres as though they represent scenes taken from a dream. The anxieties and uncertainties of the war, of course, add to this effect, as did Vaughan’ s troubled emotional life.
Keith Vaughan
Copse by Mortimers II, 1971-2
Oil on board
46.5 x 40 cm.
Signed 'Vaughan', lower right
Provenance
Waddington Galleries, London
Professor J. N. Ball
Private Collection, U.K.
Literature
Anthony Hepworth & Ian Massey, Keith Vaughan: The Mature Oils 1946-77, Sansom & Co., Bristol, 2012, p.178, no. AH519
Exhibited
London, Waddington Galleries, Keith Vaughan: New Paintings, 1973
Glasgow, Compass Gallery, Keith Vaughan: Paintings and Gouaches, 1976 (no. 5)
London, Austin/Desmond, A Selection of Work, 1987
Additional information
Vaughan painted the Essex landscape over the course of two decades. Mortimer’s Farm is situated a few miles southwest of Harrow Hill cottage. As the title suggests, Copse by Mortimer’s II was his second attempt at depicting agricultural buildings viewed through the small woodland area between his house and the local farm. The first version caused such problems that he painted over it five years later.
The late Essex paintings are generally small and intimate in conception. They contain little human activity, nor do they depict picturesque subjects customarily found in landscape paintings. The area around Harrow Hill is lacking in scenic hills, rivers or other traditionally picturesque features. The rolling, hedge-less farmland is interrupted only by agricultural buildings, wooded coppices, and some notable medieval barns. It was precisely this unspectacular quality that attracted him:
A landscape must be familiar otherwise I only see the superficial dramatic aspects that any other sightseer sees. The ones that have revealed the most to me are the ones outside the window of my studio. Trees & sky & some man-made objects such as a house – that is enough to start the reaction. A landscape can only be measured by its remoteness from, & similarity to, human beings. But they must be as remote as the landscape is remote, however familiar & visible. What I like best is a small, compact, unspectacular landscape, combining as much of the three basic elements – air, earth & water – within a space not so large that I couldn’t walk around it in half & hour (Keith Vaughan, unpublished and undated studio notes, c. 1959).
The application of the pigment is rich and varied, in places flat and opaque and in others, more translucent. Gestural brush strokes act as an equivalent of dried tree bark or the texture of desiccated, autumnal foliage. They create the quality of flux across the surface of the panel. Some forms appear to advance towards the viewer, while others recede into the distance. For example, the creamy ochres act as a foreground space and the colder, ultramarine blues retreat into the distance. To achieve a sense of space Vaughan has flattened the landscape elements into overlapping planes and blocks of organic shapes. Gradually we become aware of bending boughs, brushwood, distant vegetation and patches of blue sky, glimpsed through the thicket and undergrowth. Vaughan has not attempted to reproduce how the eye perceives the scene but paints the experience of moving though the woodland towards Mortimer’s farm.
Keith Vaughan
Frogmen and Worbarrow, 1964
Gouache and collage on paper
50.8 x 40.6 cm.
Signed and dated 'Keith Vaughan/March 1964.' (lower centre)
Provenance
Dr Patrick Woodcock, by whom gifted to the present owner
Private Collection, Ireland
Osborne Samuel London
Additional information
Vaughan was familiar with Worbarrow Bay on the Isle of Purbeck and painted several works inspired by its craggy, limestone cliffs (see Purbeck Landscape 1963; Small Limestone Landscape, 1963 and Black Purbeck Landscape, 1964). The coastline is popular with sea divers, not least because of the dramatic underwater boulders and gullies and the wreck of a barge off Worbarrow Tout. The present work was inspired by an incident from the previous year. In the summer of 1963, Vaughan drove down to the Jurassic Coast specifically to hunt for new subjects. While sitting having a drink at the Swanage Hotel, he recorded in his journal an encounter with some sea divers that morning:
We drove down on Saturday through hideous traffic until at Romney we cut adrift & took byways through the New Forest. Blissful Isolation & open roads. Beer & Sandwiches at a little pub. There were perfect moments – the first view of Chapman’s Pool on Sunday morning, crossing the stubbly field near the farm, the low stone wall. And then the sudden unsuspected drop away & the bay far below, nearly deserted, china blue.
The scramble down – knee-breaking. So much further than it looks, the distances always deceptive in this landscape which was made for Mastodons. Then the group of skin divers which appeared from outer space, peeling on their incredibly erotic, skin tight rubbers, crutch piece, belt of lead, leggings, top piece, helmet & goggles. Then they set off face down on the water, dozens at a time, only their red periscopes showing. (Keith Vaughan, Journal XLIV – supplement, Swanage, July 29-31, 1963).
The group of figures are preparing for their dive. The standing, foreground figure, complete with flippers and swimming trunks, dominates the composition. Arms raised, he prepares to ‘peel on’ his gear. His friends stand or sit on a rock close by. The neutral palette indicates a grey overcast day and the patches of black and splashes of paint evoke the rubbery squelch of their diving suits. Areas of collage and hand-rendered lettering (these are not unknown elsewhere in Vaughan’s more improvisatory gouaches) can also be seen and add to the texture and inventive quality of the imagery.
Gerard Hastings
Keith Vaughan
Group of Figures (Blue), 1962-66
Oil on canvas
101.6 x 91.4 cm.
Signed, titled and dated 'Keith Vaughan, Group of Figures, March 1962, Repainted 1966', verso
Provenance
Matthiesen Gallery, London, 1962
Marlborough Fine Art, London, 1962
Waddington Galleries, London
Hargreaves and Ball Trust
Austin/Desmond, Sunninghill
Roger Thomas
Anthony Hepworth Fine Art, Bath
Private Collection, U.K.
Literature
Anthony Hepworth & Ian Massey, Keith Vaughan: The Mature Oils 1946-77, Sansom & Co., Bristol, 2012, p.163, no. AH463
Exhibited
London, Whitechapel Gallery, Keith Vaughan: A Retrospective Exhibition, 1962, cat. no. 305
Canada, Arts Council, Exhibition of Contemporary British Paintings, 1963-64, cat. no. 52 (touring exhibition)
Aldeburgh Festival, 1973, no. 13
Manchester, Tib Lane Gallery, Keith Vaughan, Paintings, Gouaches and Drawings, 1976 (cat. no. 22)
Bath, Victoria Art Gallery, Keith Vaughan: Figure and Landscape, 2007, p. 34, cat. no. 32 (ill.)
Additional information
Group of Figures (Blue) was started in 1962 and exhibited several times once completed. However, Vaughan reworked the painting, as was his habit, a few years later, altering its surface textures and tonality but retaining most of the original compositional features.
Two pale figures stand shoulder to shoulder, arms behind their backs and tilting their heads tenderly towards one another. They are bathed in opalescent light against an atmospheric, twilight background. Patches of cream and bright yellow on their torsos glow and sing against the other restrained colours. Soft blue shadows play on the shoulders and chest of the left figure, establishing both a tonal and a character contrast between him and his paler companion.
Vaughan’s application is sumptuous, and his pigment is built up in alternating rich layers and diluted washes. The highly worked and hard-won surface, acting as a tactile equivalent of skin, is one of his most sensuous.
Keith Vaughan
Nude Against a Rock, 1957
Oil on board
55.9 x 61 cm.
Signed 'Vaughan', lower right
Provenance
R N Kershaw, Wargrave
Leicester Galleries, London
Private Collection
Prof. John Ball
Private Collection
Private Collection
Osborne Samuel Gallery
Literature
John Rothenstein, British Art since 1900, Phaidon, London, 1962 (pl.150)
Philip Vann & Gerard Hastings, Keith Vaughan, Lund Humphries in association with Osborne Samuel, 2012 p.16 no. 9 (ill.)
Anthony Hepworth & Ian Massey, Keith Vaughan: The Mature Oils 1946-77, Sansom & Co., Bristol, 2012 p.107 no. AH260 (ill.)
Gerard Hastings, Visions and Recollections , Pagham Press, 2014, (ill.), Cat. No. 101.
Exhibited
Leicester Galleries, London, 1958, Keith Vaughan – Recent Paintings (no.23)
Menier Gallery, London, Clough & Vaughan: Visions and Recollections, 2014
Additional information
Nude Against a Rock is one of Vaughan’s more resolved depictions of the male form. Possessing a thorough knowledge of Ancient Greek art, it is Vaughan’s homage to the statuary of the Classical period, which developed the harmonious proportions he so admired in sculpture. He has positioned the figure in a contrapposto pose whereby the weight is supported mainly on one leg, while the other is more relaxed. In the upper torso the opposite arm is in tension, holding his staff behind, while the corresponding arm hangs free. This has the effect of tilting both the hips and the shoulders and gently enlivens, what would otherwise be, a static figure. Placing him slightly to the left and twisting his head to the right, augments this delicate animation and generates a sense of tranquillity and repose.
In the distance, an ominous sky and dark trees frame the figure and, in the foreground, an imposing rock presses upon him. Vaughan offers us no information as to who this vulnerable youth is or why he stands here in this barren, rocky terrain. The intentional omission of facial features precludes identification or character analysis. Similarly, the absence of clothing prevents us making judgements about his social status or identity. By approaching the human form in this way Vaughan discourages us from imposing narrative associations and, consequently, the figure is universalised. While he may not be identifiable, we do know who the model was. Vaughan had met Johnny Walsh in the Black Horse pub in Soho the year before. He recorded their meeting in his journal.
January 8, 1956: Unforeseen encounter on New Year’s Eve with Johnny Walsh. L’Archange of Jean Genet. Captivating face of a young boxer. I invited him to come & let me draw him sometime. He finally arrived one afternoon last week. His clothes, all of which he at once took off, assuming that to be my wish, were either stolen or given to him. He gave me full details of his life. Brought up apparently in a perfectly respectable working-class family. Became involved with a car-stealing gang, ran a small-scale brothel (‘only 10/- a time’) & was finally caught & sentenced for petty larceny. Is now just released & has ‘no fixed address’ as the police would say. Lives by pickpocketing. All this he told me sitting naked beside the stove in my studio.
One of the most notable qualities of Nude Against a Rock is Vaughan’s treatment of the anatomy. It is broken down into small facets and angled planes of colour applied, for the most part, with a flat-ended brush. An array of blocked-in but related, fleshy tints of ochre, yellow and orange describe the articulation of the athletic figure. The more neutralised hues of the setting serves to frame this flame-like human presence.
Keith Vaughan
Landscape, 1960
Oil on board
42 x 39 cm.
Signed lower right
Provenance
Acquired directly from the artist
Marlborough Gallery
Private Collection, France
Osborne Samuel, London
Literature
Massey & Hepworth, Keith Vaughan, The Mature Oils 1946-77, Sansom & Company, Bristol, 2012, p.123, cat no. AH326
Exhibited
London, Whitechapel Gallery, Retrospective Keith Vaughan, March – April 1962, no.265
London, Olympia, February – March 2002, Keith Vaughan: Paintings and Drawings, n° KV 282
Bath, Victoria Art Gallery, February – March 2007, Keith Vaughan: Figure and Landscape, no.30, ill. p.32
Additional information
From the later 1950s, Vaughan painted landscapes without figures that verged towards complete abstraction: works in which colour is tessellated into compositions structured by more or less geometrical units. The impetus was light and colour, whether experienced abroad, in France, Greece, Italy and Iowa (where he held a residency), or nearer to home, in London, Dorset, Essex, Northumbria, Wales and Ireland. Landscape would be internalised and re-presented, sometimes leaving vestiges of buildings, trees, snow or hills, sometimes just the trace of these elements through their seasonal timbre. Vaughan described the process and its consequences in his working notes:
Particles of landscape which detach themselves float out into space – continuing a foreground plane against a distant one. Floating particles of landscape create a vivid sense of space … Small floating squares and rectangles. They might equally be leaves or scraps of paper. This is unimportant. Their identity will be determined by their circumstances. ₁
This return to ‘pure landscape’ was noted and commended by Edwin Mullins, reviewing Vaughan’s large-scale retrospective at the Whitechapel Art Gallery in 1962. ‘Among the best of the recent work’, wrote Mullins, ‘were those in the spirit of the early landscapes; paintings inspired by travel and places, full of atmosphere and effects of light, and painted in the warm, sombre colours of the earth.’² Landscape (1960) was one such work. A source in landscape is hard to detect, yet the composition splinters light and autumnal warmth into a patchwork of lines and blocks, counterpointed by a continuum of hazy blue-greys.
₁ Keith Vaughan, ‘Notes of the Process of Painting and Diary of Work in Progress’; quoted in Keith Vaughan: Myth, Mortality and the Male Figure, exhibition catalogue (London: Osborne Samuel, 2019), p. 36
² Edwin Mullins, ‘Vaughan Reconsidered’, Apollo, Vol. 26, No. 3 (May 1962), p. 219.
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