Fireworks

Here is just a brief collection of Ravilious Firework pictures. During the war Eric wrote that the naval ship’s gunfire were like fireworks, I haven’t included those war works, but just the actual depictions of festive images.

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 Eric Ravilious – Fireworks – Mural at the Midland Hotel, Morecambe, 1933

The mural above was painted by Eric Ravilious and his wife Tirzah Garwood for the Midland Hotel in Morecambe. The hotel was designed by Oliver Hill. The murals in the dining room were in two parts, Fireworks and Flags, or Night and Day as they are also known.

The race to complete works in time for ‘a grand opening’ of the hotel would mean the newly plastered walls they were painting the mural on had not been left to dry sufficiently.

The diaries of both Eric and Tirzah tell of how leaks from the roof and cracks in the wall had also hindered the painting. The paint bubbled and chipped off within a year and the mural, only two years old was painted over.

The whole mural was repainted in 1989 for the filming of the Agatha Christie novel – Double Sin. Below you can see Hugh Fraser in front of the repainted mural. It is not precise, but good enough, the original pagoda building’s windows were circles, in the repainting they were rectangles.

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 Scene from Agatha Christie’s Double Sin, ITV, 1990

The painting below Alan Powers suggested might have been a study for the mural design by Ravilious. I think it shows a young artist in his bedsit flat in London, Bawden made a similar work in his etching, ‘London Back Garden, 1927’. As a friend of mine called it, “a stacked up world with too many people and not enough money”.

All his life, fireworks were an important and special source of inspiration for Eric’s work, and were made use of in many different ways. By now he and Tirzah had moved from Kensington to Hammersmith, but not before Eric had painted an elaborate watercolour of Bonfire Night, as watched from the roof of their house in Stratford Road. 

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 Eric Ravilious – November 5th, 1933

Below is another good example of Fireworks featured on the Coronation Mug by Ravilious for Wedgwood. The examples show wild fireworks on one side and on the other side firework fountains above the royal heraldic beasts.

A fun fact is that the shop Dunbar Hey were the first to stock the mug and the first customer was Wallis Simpson.

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 Eric Ravilious – Design for the Coronation Mug of Edward VIII  for Wedgwood, 1936

The final of the pictures comes from the book High Street, a series of lithographs by Ravilious with text by J.M.Richards, then husband of Peggy Angus.

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 Eric Ravilious – Fireworks – from the book High Street, 1938

Given the Second World War was coming I thought the inclusion of Mosley and his Blackshirt’s in the newspaper board highly interesting. If I was penning one of the many books on Ravilious I would say how Mosley and the fireworks were interlinked. That they would predict the horrors of the war to come and the domestic Ajax was a mockery of such views – Thankfully I think posturing after the fact is horse-crap.

† Helen Binyon – Eric Ravilious: Memoir of an Artist, 1983

Why not a Tate East?

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 John Armstrong – Coggeshall Church, Essex, 1940 – Tate – Not on Display

When most people think of artists and where they paint – they think of St
Ives, Cornwall. The new Tate gallery there and its controversial Stirling Prize nominated extension have been both a help and hindrance to locals,  but maybe not the 24% of those in St Ives who are Second Home owners †. The same could be said for Margate and the Bilbao effect from the Turner Contemporary Tate Gallery there. The Tate has pushed tourist through Margate’s streets like air into lungs. In the East of England is where many of the country’s best loved artists lived, but sadly the East of England is rather poor when it comes to showing off their artists – so why not a branch of the Tate in Aldeburgh or Southwold or Colchester?

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 John Constable – Stoke-by-Nayland, 1811 – Tate – Not on Display

The famous East Anglian artists of old are John Crome, Thomas Gainsborough and John Constable. Crome was the most famous of the Norwich School of painters who were inspired by painters like Jacob van Ruisdael and the Dutch style. They painted the vast waterways, windmills and dykes of the fenland and Norfolk Broads. Crome also had many talented pupils. John Sell Cotman, one of the country’s best watercolour artists, was also part of this brew.

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 Alfred Munnings – From My Bedroom Window, 1930 – Tate, Not on Display

John Constable painted the Dedham Vale in Suffolk and, most famously, Flatford Mill. A brisk walk away is the Museum and former home of Alfred Munnings. Also in Dedham was the original home of Cedric Morris’s East Anglian School of Painting and Drawing, but when it burnt down (John Nash told Ronald Blythe ‡) Munnings drove around the village like Mr Toad shouting ‘Down with modern art’. Cedric Morris then bought Benton End from Alfred Sainsbury in 1939 and continued his art school with his life partner, Arthur Lett-Haines. Lucien Freud, Maggi Hambling, Lucy Harwood, Valerie Thornton and Olive Cook all studied there.

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 Cedric Morris – Iris Seedlings, 1943 – Tate – Not on Display

In 1940 after his London home suffered bomb damage, the sculptor Henry Moore made his home in Perry Green, just south of Much Hadham. It is now a museum with a collection of his works in the grounds. Moore walked around the local fields picking up pieces of flint thrown aside from ploughing and in his studio he would draw them as pre-made organic sculpture. Moore called them his ‘library of natural forms’ and they would inspire his larger works.

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 Henry Moore – Seated Woman, 1957 – Tate – Not On Display

John Piper in the 80s made a beautiful series of ruined churches of East Anglia. In 1934, at Ivon Hitchens cottage in Sizewell, Suffolk, Piper met his wife Myfanwy Evens. They married in 1937. Myfanwy worked with Benjamin Britten writing lyrics to his operas including Death in Venice. Britten lived in Aldeburgh with his partner Peter Pears. Piper would design many of the stage sets.

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 John Piper – Covehithe Church, 1983 – Tate – Not On Display

On the other side of Colchester in 1944, war artist John Nash was restoring the Elizabethan Bottengoms Farm, moving in with his wife Christine Kühlenthal. Christine had studied at the Slade school of art alongside Dora Carrington, Mark Gertler and she worked at the Omega Workshops while John had become famous for his monumental paintings of the First World War alongside his brother Paul. At Bottengoms, John became famous for his landscape paintings and botanical studies. He taught at Colchester School of Art with Richard ‘Dickie’ Chopping, an artist known for his dust jackets for Ian Fleming’s James Bond series. Dickie lived with his lover, another landscape painter, Denis Wirth-Miller. Their life with Francis Bacon has been expertly documented in Jon Lys Turner’s ‘The Visitors’ Book’. Bacon owned a home in Wivenhoe as did Dickie and Denis.

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 John Nash – Mill Building, Boxted, 1962 – Tate – Not On Display

Also on the staff at Colchester was John o’Connor, a wood-engraver and landscape painter. He was once the pupil of both Edward Bawden and Eric Ravilious at the Royal College of Art. Bawden and Ravilious where renting part of Brick House in Great Bardfield, Essex, when Ravilious moved a few miles away to Castle Hedingham with his painter wife Tirzah. Bawden and his Leach Pottery student wife Charlotte bought Brick House. Both men became war artists and only Bawden returned from the conflict after painting the early war, including Dunkirk. He was also shipwrecked off the coast of Africa, rescued and imprisoned by Vichy French forces, liberated by the Americans and then off again to paint the campaigns in Africa and Iraq. Eric died in 1942 when the aircraft he was in was lost off Iceland. Ravilious used the Essex area profusely in his short life there in
wood-engravings and watercolours.

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 Eric Ravilious – Tiger Moth, 1942 – Tate – Not on Display

Around the village of Great Bardfield, Bawden was joined by John Aldridge (a landscape painter), Walter Hoyle (one of Bawden’s students who helped Bawden on work at the Festival of Britain) and Michael Rothenstein (the pioneer printmaker and brother to the Director of the Tate Gallery). Other artists in the village were George Chapman, Bernard Cheese, Stanley Clifford-Smith, Audrey Cruddas, Sheila Robinson and Kenneth Rowntree.

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 John Aldridge – Head and Fruit, 1930 – Tate – Not on Display

In the small hamlet of Landermere – on the coastland of Essex – lived Adrian and Karin Stephen with their daughter Judith. Adrian was the younger brother of Virginia Wolfe and Vanessa Bell. After her parents death Judith lived on in their house with her husband and Independent Group member, Nigel Henderson. Also in Landermere they were joined by Eduardo Paolozzi who owned one of the cottages and set up Hammer Prints Limited, a company for printing limited edition works and designing abstract home wares such as wallpapers and tiles. Neighbours in the hamlet were architect Basil Spence and Festival of Britain artist and Coventry Cathedral glass engraver, John Hutton, as well as his son, children’s book illustrator Warwick.

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 Eduardo Paolozzi – Cyclops, 1957 – Tate – Not on Display

The Stephens were not the only Bloomsbury members to be in the East. David Garnett, his lover Duncan Grant, and Grants wife Vanessa Bell were all staying at Wissett Lodge, Suffolk in the summer of 1916 as conscientious objectors, working on a farm, though Vanessa is the one who got the most painting done.

With the boom in British publishing many of these artists enjoyed illustration commissions, from the cookery books of Ravilious and Bawden to poetry books decorated by John Piper and gardening books illustrated by John Nash.

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 Spencer Gore – The Beanfield, Letchworth, 1912 – Tate – Not On Display

Naturally there are names left out but there are too many artists to list. But why are they so poorly represented in the region? In the East there is the Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts and Kettles Yard but neither of these galleries aim to promote the work of East Anglian artists, but rather the international collections of the Sainsbury family and Jim Ede. They both do a lot of good for the local economy but it’s not the same as championing the area’s artists.

The nearest to it is the Fry Art Gallery in Saffron Walden, but their manifesto only lets them collect work from artists who have lived in North West part of Essex. But for all of Bedfordshire, Cambridgeshire, Essex, Hertfordshire, Norfolk and Suffolk there should be a body to represent them.

There are so many other artists that could be liberated from the Tate and their archives and put on show to support and promote the region where they were created. At the time of publishing, all the artworks in this blog  owned by the Tate were not on display.

† https://www.cornwalllive.com/news/cornwall-news/cornwall-second-homes-plague-revealed-1398388
A Broad Canvas – Ian Collins 1999 – From the Foward by Ronald
Blythe, p6.

Edward Bawden in Norfolk

There is nothing I have found that Bawden said in favour of Norfolk that would make this post become more interesting than me presenting some of his works to you. The works I have found showed that when he visited a place he painted it from various angles. I think all of these works were painted in the late 1960s as Bawden had an exhibition at The Fine Art Society in November of 1968 of paintings from Ireland, the Middle East and Norfolk.

The Church of St Michael The Archangel in Booton, about 10 miles drive from Aylsham is an architectural marvel that you don’t see in Britain. Designed in French Gothic style with pinnacles and two towers it might be a small set from Lord of the Rings.

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 The Church of St. Michael The Archangel, Booton, Norfolk,

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 Edward Bawden – Design for The Church of St. Michael The Archangel, Booton, Norfolk, 1966

The painting below I rather like for its bold outline painting, but more for the shade of foliage to the left and white church stone in front, the church is painted  in a gradient from white on the left, to black flints on the right.

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 Edward Bawden – The Church of St. Michael The Archangel, Booton, Norfolk, 1966

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 Edward Bawden – The Church of St. Michael The Archangel, Booton, Norfolk, 1966

Worstead Church is signed but looks more unfinished. It has the hints of a John Piper in the colour blotting and slight unfinished abstraction, though this may be because it mostly was unfinished.

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 Edward Bawden – Worstead Church, 1966

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 Edward Bawden – Worstead Church, 1966

Above a detail section of the Church that makes Bawden’s linocuts so wonderful; He takes a section out of scenes when making them into linocuts (on the Road To Thaxsted is a good example where he has cropped the picture with part of the Cottage roof but did not show the whole scene. If all the cottage was to appear it would look very twee). Bawden has also cut grooved grass, and a wild hacking of the lino made the distress on the building. Its printing in such a dark blue it looks like a negative image from film and to be a little provocative, I have inverted the image as a negative below.. I think it looks more pleasing, more like an Ed Kluz, though Edward wouldn’t thought much to my meddling!

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 after Edward Bawden – Worstead Church, 1966 (Inverted image)

The following images are Bawden as a good watercolour artist, using a wash on the grass and then a darker series of lines, the sky made up of geometric clouds and the trees inked out in pen and filled in with a broad green wash in a grey of the church and a green.

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 Edward Bawden – St Mary’s Church, Marlingford, Norfolk.

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 Edward Bawden – St Mary’s, Marlingford IV, 1968

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 Edward Bawden – The Churches of All Saints and St Mary’s, Great Melton, Norfolk, 1968

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 Edward Bawden – Little Melton Church, Norfolk, 1968

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 Edward Bawden – North Creake Abbey – Interior, Norfolk, 1967

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 Edward Bawden – Birnham Priory, Norfolk, 1968

 Original Advert for the Fine Art Society Exhibition.

To see my post on Edward Bawden in King’s Lynn, click here.

To Visit Britain’s Landmarks

I have featured some of the Shell posters in this series on the blog before but I thought it would be more interesting to post as many of them as I could find. I rather though the range of artists was brilliant. 

Shell Mex Limited appointed a new Publicity Director in 1932, Jack Beddington. His insight turned the British Shell advertisements of the 1930s into some of the classic campaigns of the twentieth century. The genius was to let artists depict Britain in their own styles, they would paint an image and whatever their style, and it would be framed by text. There would be no need for product placement, for models holding petrol cans, it was a campaign exposing the beauty and wonder of Britain and modern art. It was to inspire people to use their cars to see the nation and so use more petrol.

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Plats du Jour

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Plats du Jour by Patience Gray and Primrose Boyd is a book illustrated by a 27-year-old David Gentleman in 1957 used to be everywhere, I would see it in most charity shops and on book stalls, however now if you look online and try to find a copy it is about £30 and up. The Persephone Press reissued it it in 2006 with the original illustrations. However the art of the small illustrated cook book has been lost on a tide of celebrity endorsed cookery books, for a nice cookery book we can only look back or to a private press and hope to get books like Lovely Food – A Cookery Notebook by Ruth Lowinsky, Mediterranean Food by Elizabeth David or such like.

However I thought Plats Du Jour was worth looking at in close up for the beautiful covers, letter work and illustration inside. They are so beautiful it is almost aspirational. It sold 50,000 copies in its first year, far outstripping Elizabeth David who was the cookery writer of that age.

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Although Gentleman has designed almost everything it could be imagined from Coins and Stamps to Underground Station Artwork and Anti War propaganda he is known most of either his wood-engravings or his lithographs but his drawings and watercolours need a modern retrospective.

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All Saints and Saint Andrew, Kingston.

Here is a brief bit of information and some photographs from the church in Kingston, Cambridgeshire. It’s within cycling distance from my home so I went and took some photos of the church and surroundings.

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The most interesting features of Kingston Church is the wall paintings with-in. Many didn’t survive the reformation and ‘whitewashing’ of churches and fewer still the later Victorian fashion of stripping plaster from walls in favour of stonework and totally refitting the woodwork.

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Above is a wall painting of the Crucifixion, with unusual iconography. On a red ochre ground decorated with a brocade pattern there are three silhouettes, of a crucifix and two figures. On either side of the crucifix is a kneeling angel holding a cup which catches Christ’s blood; beyond these a pair of angels playing musical instruments and a pair censing. The censers, with their chains, were probably appliqué wood or metal. Above the rood are two faint circles, representing the sun, to the left, and the crescent moon, to the right, symbolising life and death.

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One of the paintings on the walls is of the Devil standing on a tree. He has bat wings, a tale and horns. 

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The Seven Acts of Mercy – Wheel of Mercy.

Six of the seven acts, intended to counter-balance the Seven Deadly Sins, were derived from the gospel of St Matthew, Chapter XXV:

  1. feeding the hungry;
  2. giving drink to the thirsty; 
  3. offering hospitality to the stranger; 
  4. clothing the naked; 
  5. visiting the sick; 
  6. visiting prisoners. 
  7. burying the dead – this one comes from the Book of Tobit, Chapter I. 

The wheel is turned by two angels with outstretched arms, one to the lower left, the other to the lower right.

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First Prize at the Slade

The University College London and the Slade School of Fine Art are linked and in the UCL art archives are many painting from the Slade’s past. Many are nudes and it turns out, they are the winners of the Slade School of Art prize for Figure Painting. I have not included all the paintings – some are un-named and un-dated but must fit in the missing spaces. I have put them in order of date and many of the names listed are surprisingly famous.

Frederick Brown was appointed as Slade Professor in 1892 and introduced new prizes for the 1893-4 session. The prizes for life painting and drawing, anatomical drawing and new figure composition. The prizes were abandoned in 1965 and in 1966 students could choose what they presented. I don’t know what the prizes were for Figure Drawing but I do know Stanley Spencer won the Slade Summer Composition Prize in 1912 and it was £25, today with inflation that is £2,800. 

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 Augustus Edwin John – Figure Painting, Second Prize (Equal), 1898

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 Evelyn Cheston – Figure Painting, Second Prize (Equal), 1898

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 William Orpen – Figure Painting, First Prize, 1899

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 Albert Rutherston – Figure Painting, First Prize (Equal), 1901

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 Elinor Proby Adams – Figure Painting, Second Prize (Equal), 1906

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 Maxwell Gordon Lightfoot – Figure Painting, First Prize, 1909

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 Maxwell Gordon Lightfoot – Figure Painting, First Prize (Equal), 1909

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 Elsie McNaught – Figure Painting, First Prize (Equal), 1910

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 Edward Alexander Wadsworth – Figure Painting, First Prize (Equal), 1911

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 Thomas Saunders Nash – Figure Painting, First Prize, 1912

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 Dora Carrington – Figure Painting, Second Prize, 1912

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 Eileen Lambton – Figure Painting, Third Prize, 1912

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 Dora Carrington – Figure Painting, First Prize (Equal), 1913

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 Thomas Tennant Baxter – Figure Painting, First Prize (Equal), 1914

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 Thomas Tennant Baxter – Figure Painting, First Prize (Equal), 1914

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 Arthur Outlaw – Figure Painting, Second Prize (Equal), 1914

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 Grace English – Figure Painting, First Prize (Equal), 1916

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 Neville Lewis – Figure Painting, First Prize (Equal), 1916

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 Helen G. Young – Figure Painting, First Prize (Equal), 1916

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 Enid M. Fearnside – Figure Painting, First Prize (Equal), 1917

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 Rita Nahabedian – Figure Painting, First Prize (Equal), 1917

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 Henry Charles Bevan-Petman – Figure Painting, First Prize (Equal), 1917

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 Alice Joyce-Smith – Figure Painting, First Prize (Equal), 1918

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 Dorothy Josephine Coke – Figure Painting, First Prize (Equal), 1918

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 L. A. (Ida) Knox – Figure Painting, First Prize (Equal), 1918

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 Mabel Greenberg – Figure Painting, Second Prize (Equal), 1919

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 Ralph Nicholas Chubb – Figure Painting, Second Prize (Equal), 1919

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 Amy Nimr – Figure Painting, First Prize, 1919

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 Robin Guthrie – Figure Painting, First Prize (Equal), 1920

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 C. E. Roberts – Figure Painting, First Prize (Equal), 1920

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 Rodney Joseph Burn – Figure Painting, Second Prize (Equal), 1920

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 Daphne Pollen – Figure Painting, Second Prize (Equal), 1920

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 Daphne Pollen – Figure Painting, Second Prize (Equal), 1920

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 Rodney Joseph Burn – Figure Painting, First Prize (Equal), 1921

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 Walter Thomas Monnington – Figure Painting, First Prize (Equal), 1921

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 Muriel Holinger Hope – Figure Painting, First Prize (Equal), 1921

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 Allan Gwynne-Jones – Figure Painting, First Prize, 1922

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 Theodora Meares – Figure Painting, Second Prize, 1922

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 Robert Boyd Morrison – Figure Painting, First Prize (Equal), 1923

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 John Hookham – Figure Painting, First Prize (Equal), 1923

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 William D. Dring – Figure Painting, First Prize (Equal), 1924

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 Rex Whistler – Figure Painting, First Prize (Equal), 1924

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 Robin Bartlett – Figure Painting, First Prize (Equal), 1925

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 Leila Faithfull – Figure Painting, First Prize, 1925

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 Jesse Dale Cast – Figure Painting, First Prize (Equal), 1925

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 Alice van den Bergh – Figure Painting, First Prize (Equal), 1926

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 Francis E. Hopkinson – Figure Painting, First Prize (Equal), 1926

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Glynn O. Jones – Figure Painting, First Prize (Equal), 1926

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 Kathleen Hartnell – Figure Painting, First Prize (Equal), 1926

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 Ena Muriel Russell Higson – Figure Painting, First Prize (Equal), 1927

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 Helen Lessore – Figure Painting, First Prize (Equal), 1927

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 Joseph H. Rogozen – Figure Painting, First Prize (Equal), 1928

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 Dorothy I. Reid – Figure Painting, First Prize (Equal), 1928

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 Bryan William Bodington – Figure Painting, First Prize,
1930

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 Olga Lehmann – Figure Painting, First Prize (Equal), 1931

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 Elizabeth Brown – Figure Painting, First Prize (Equal), 1931

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 Margaret A. Berry – Figure Painting, First Prize (Equal), 1932

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 Thelma Carstensen – Figure Painting, First Prize, 1933

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 Guy Anthony William Burn – Figure Painting, First Prize,
1937

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 Mary Kent Harrison – Figure Painting, First Prize, 1938 

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 Nora B. Braham – Figure Painting, First Prize, 1939

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 William D. W. Paynter – Figure Painting, First Prize (Equal), 1940

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 Jean Muriel Brett – Figure Painting, Second Prize, 1943

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 Nancy Mellor – Figure Painting, First Prize (Equal), 1948

Better Known Podcast – Robjn Cantus

Better Known Podcast – Robjn Cantus

Discover Robert Henderson Blyth

There is always the thrill of what comes next in my hunt for things to buy and own. I found this artist’s work, printed in black and white in the studio magazine and knew I would love it. The magazine was from 1958 and I think the art that I have been able to find so far by Henderson Blyth makes him an unknown treasure, to me anyhow.

Among the younger established painters of the Contemporary Scottish School none has attained a more prominent place than Henderson Blyth.

Blyth is a true Scot. He has inherited the characteristic temperament of his people and his art is the embodiment of all that is nordic, elemental and discrete. In addition he has inherited the Scots intellectual curiosity and insatiable appetite for intimate knowledge of the phenomenal world. Together these ingredients account for the peculiarly personal and indigenous quality of his work.

Trained at Glasgow, he was early initiated into the poetry of tone and the ‘logic’ of form. A year’s study under the late James Cowie, R.S.A. at the country Art School at Hospitalfield enabled him to continue and develop his personal interests and leanings. Cowie was an impeccable draughtsman, a fastidious classicist and a man of profound artistic integrity. To a young romantic the environment at Hospitalfield could hardly have been better adapted to his intellectual and spiritual requirements. A prodigious worker. Blyth’s reputation rests primarily upon his landscapes which are burdened and sombre.

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 Robert Henderson Blyth – Rain on the Hill

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 Robert Henderson Blyth – Thunder Light, 1967 

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 Robert Henderson Blyth – Self-portrait as soldier in trenches – Sub-titled ‘Existence Precarious’, 1919

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 Robert Henderson Blyth – The Artist’s Wife Hanging out the Laundry, 1947

The Studio Magazine – March 1958

Bardfield Cookery Collection – Vol IV – Chloe Cheese

Here to go on with the Great Bardfield Cookery Collection are some of Chloe Cheese’s illustrations for Big Flavours and Rough Edges by David Eyre and the Eagle Cook, published in 2001.

Chloe Cheese is an English illustrator, painter and print-maker. She was born in London, the daughter of artist and printmaker Bernard Cheese and artist and illustrator Sheila Robinson. Her childhood was spent in Great Bardfield, Essex. She studied at Cambridge School of Art and the Royal College of Art.

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