Augustus John 1878-1961
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
The London Group Open – Exhibiting Artists
The London Group Open 2017 Part One: 8 - 17 November 2017 Part Two: 22 November - 1 December 2017 The Cello Factory 33-34 Cornwall Road, London SE1 8TJ 2pm - 6pm daily The UK’s longest-running and most prestigious artists’ collective, The London Group, is delighted to announce the artists selected from open call, to exhibit alongside its members, in rd the 83 London Group Open. The exhibition is a wonderful opportunity for the selected artists to raise their profile, win cash and material prizes, and exhibit their work to the public alongside the Group’s esteemed members. From a wide range of submissions, The London Group Selection Committee – which consists of existing members – carefully selected 79 artists to each exhibit a work across two exhibitions at The Cello Factory, London from 8 – 17 November 2017 and 22 November – 1 December 2017. Part 1: 8 - 17 November 2017 Jonathan Alibone Belinda Bailey Rosalind Barker Maria Bouquet Day Bowman Anita Bryan Stephen Calcutt Adrienne Cameron Stephen Carley Tom Cartmill Michael Coombs Shona Davies, Dave Monaghan and Jon Klein Richard Dickson Jo Evans Jane Eyton Garry Flinders Chloe Fremantle Nicholas Gentilli Lyndsey Gilmour David Gould Ashley Greaves Gudrun Sigridur Haraldsdottir Joshua Hilton Beverley Isaacs Aubrey Laret Jockel Liess Rebekah Miller Blake O'Donnell Sarah Pager Sumi Perera Angela Smith Louise Whittles Emma Witter Eleanor Wood LJ Wright Part 2: 22 November – 1 December 2017 Susan Absolon Jackie Berridge Jo Brown Stephen Buckeridge Sara Choudhrey Liz Collini Richard Colson Tim -
Auckland City Art Gallery
Frances Hodgkins 14 auckland city art gallery modern european paintings in new Zealand This exhibition brings some of the modern European paintings in New Zealand together for the first time. The exhibition is small largely because many galleries could not spare more paintings from their walls and also the conditions of certain bequests do not permit loans. Nevertheless, the standard is reasonably high. Chronologically the first modern movement represented is Impressionism and the latest is Abstract Expressionism, while the principal countries concerned are Britain and France. Two artists born in New Zealand are represented — Frances Hodgkins and Raymond Mclntyre — the former well known, the latter not so well as he should be — for both arrived in Europe before 1914 when the foundations of twentieth century painting were being laid and the earlier paintings here provide some indication of the milieu in which they moved. It is hoped that this exhibition may help to persuade the public that New Zealand is not devoid of paintings representing the serious art of this century produced in Europe. Finally we must express our sincere thanks to private owners and public galleries for their generous response to requests for loans. P.A.T. June - July nineteen sixty the catalogue NOTE: In this catalogue the dimensions of the paintings are given in inches, height before width JANKEL ADLER (1895-1949) 1 SEATED FIGURE Gouache 24} x 201 Signed ADLER '47 Bishop Suter Art Gallery, Nelson Purchased by the Trustees, 1956 KAREL APPEL (born 1921) Dutch 2 TWO HEADS (1958) Gouache 243 x 19i Signed K APPEL '58 Auckland City Art Gallery Presented by the Contemporary Art Society, 1959 JOHN BRATBY (born 1928) British 3 WINDOWS (1957) Oil on canvas 48x144 Signed BRATBY JULY 1957 Auckland City Art Gallery Presented by Auckland Gallery Associates, 1958 ANDRE DERAIN (1880-1954) French 4 LANDSCAPE Oil on canvas 21x41 J Signed A. -
Impressionist and Modern Art Introduction Art Learning Resource – Impressionist and Modern Art
art learning resource – impressionist and modern art Introduction art learning resource – impressionist and modern art This resource will support visits to the Impressionist and Modern Art galleries at National Museum Cardiff and has been written to help teachers and other group leaders plan a successful visit. These galleries mostly show works of art from 1840s France to 1940s Britain. Each gallery has a theme and displays a range of paintings, drawings, sculpture and applied art. Booking a visit Learning Office – for bookings and general enquires Tel: 029 2057 3240 Email: [email protected] All groups, whether visiting independently or on a museum-led visit, must book in advance. Gallery talks for all key stages are available on selected dates each term. They last about 40 minutes for a maximum of 30 pupils. A museum-led session could be followed by a teacher-led session where pupils draw and make notes in their sketchbooks. Please bring your own materials. The information in this pack enables you to run your own teacher-led session and has information about key works of art and questions which will encourage your pupils to respond to those works. Art Collections Online Many of the works here and others from the Museum’s collection feature on the Museum’s web site within a section called Art Collections Online. This can be found under ‘explore our collections’ at www.museumwales.ac.uk/en/art/ online/ and includes information and details about the location of the work. You could use this to look at enlarged images of paintings on your interactive whiteboard. -
Copyright Statement
COPYRIGHT STATEMENT This copy of the thesis has been supplied on condition that anyone who consults it is understood to recognise that its copyright rests with its author and no quotation from the thesis and no information derived from it may be published without the author’s prior consent. i ii REX WHISTLER (1905 – 1944): PATRONAGE AND ARTISTIC IDENTITY by NIKKI FRATER A thesis submitted to the University of Plymouth in partial fulfilment for the degree of DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY School of Humanities & Performing Arts Faculty of Arts and Humanities September 2014 iii Nikki Frater REX WHISTLER (1905-1944): PATRONAGE AND ARTISTIC IDENTITY Abstract This thesis explores the life and work of Rex Whistler, from his first commissions whilst at the Slade up until the time he enlisted for active service in World War Two. His death in that conflict meant that this was a career that lasted barely twenty years; however it comprised a large range of creative endeavours. Although all these facets of Whistler’s career are touched upon, the main focus is on his work in murals and the fields of advertising and commercial design. The thesis goes beyond the remit of a purely biographical stance and places Whistler’s career in context by looking at the contemporary art world in which he worked, and the private, commercial and public commissions he secured. In doing so, it aims to provide a more comprehensive account of Whistler’s achievement than has been afforded in any of the existing literature or biographies. This deeper examination of the artist’s practice has been made possible by considerable amounts of new factual information derived from the Whistler Archive and other archival sources. -
A Rocky Gorge, South of France SOLD REF: 2525 Artist: ALBERT RUTHERSTON
A Rocky Gorge, South of France SOLD REF: 2525 Artist: ALBERT RUTHERSTON Height: 25 cm (9 3/4") Width: 34.5 cm (13 1/2") Framed Height: 43 cm - 16 1/1" Framed Width: 52 cm - 20 1/2" 1 Sarah Colegrave Fine Art By appointment only - London and North Oxfordshire | England +44 (0)77 7594 3722 https://sarahcolegrave.co.uk/a-rocky-gorge-south-of-france 24/09/2021 Short Description ALBERT RUTHERSTON, RWS (1881-1953) A Rocky Gorge, South of France Watercolour and bodycolour Framed 25 by 34.5 cm., 9 ¾ by 13 ½ in. (frame size 43 by 52 cm., 17 by 20 ½ in.) Provenance: The artist and by descent to Gloria, Countess Bathurst. Born Albert Daniel Rothenstein, he was the youngest of the six children of Moritz and Bertha Rothenstein, German-Jewish immigrants who had settled in Bradford, Yorkshire in the 1860s. He and his siblings proved to be a hugely talented and artistic family, his elder brother became Sir William Rotherstein (1872-1945), the artist and director of the Royal College of Art; two of his other siblings, Charles Rutherston and Emily Hesslein, both accumulated major modern British and French art collections and his nephew Sir John Rothenstein was direct of the Tate Gallery. He was educated at Bradford Grammar School before moving to London in 1898 to study at the Slade School of Art where he became close friends with Augustus John and William Orpen. He met Walter Sickert during a painting holiday in France in 1900 and by introducing Sickert to Spencer Gove became instrumental in the beginning of the Camden Town Group. -
Walter Sickert and the Sickert Family Collection in Islington
From Munich to Highbury: Walter Sickert and the Sickert family collection in Islington Islington Council’s Walter Sickert family collection contains the paintings, drawings and etchings found in Sickert’s studio at the time of his death, along with an archive of his photographs and personal papers. Most of this material was deposited with Islington Libraries by the Sickert Trust (1947-1950) in recognition of the significance of Islington in the artist’s life. The collection reflects Sickert’s enduring reputation as an artist, writer, teacher and eccentric. Sickert’s Islington works are featured in this exhibition, which also shows other trademark Walter Sickert in 1923. subjects, including figure studies, music halls and the streets and buildings of Dieppe and London. For the most part, these artworks are not finished works but they show how Sickert recorded his visual impressions in preparatory sketches that were the very source and foundation of his art. The collection also includes paintings by members of Sickert’s family and by his wife, Thérèse Lessore, and these too are displayed here. Walter Sickert. Cicely Hey. Etching. 1922-1924 (circa). 20 x 17.5 cm. Walter Sickert’s palette. Walter Richard Sickert (1860–1942) The Sickert family Walter Sickert was born in Munich on 31 May 1860. His father was Oswald Sickert, a Danish artist. His mother, Eleanor Henry, was the illegitimate daughter of an Irish dancer and an Englishman, Richard Sheepshanks, the Astronomer Royal. Oswald and Eleanor Sickert married in 1859 and Walter Sickert was the first of their six children. The family moved to England in 1868. -
100 Years of the London Group the English Are an Essentially
Moving with the times: 100 years of the London Group The English are an essentially conservative people, their suspicion of anything new or innovative, unless it can be seen to have an immediate usefulness or purpose, innate. The arts, whose lifeblood depends on precisely those qualities, have not been immune to its effects, as the current plight of the arts in the school curriculum makes only too plain while the history of the visual arts in England, certainly over the last two hundred years or more and probably since the Reformation, has been dogged by its influence. The response has nearly always been the determination of a small group of artists to set up new societies or artistic groupings; first and foremost, of course, there was the Royal Academy of Arts in 1768 and, in the 19thC., when that institution had slipped back into full-blown academic conservatism, there were first the Pre-Raphaelites and then, in 1886, the New English Art Club on hand to stir things up once again. Indeed the history of English Modernism could, from this point on, almost be written in terms of constant reaction and renewal through such associations of artists, culminating in that heady period, just before the First World War when the flurry of new artistic associations stirred up by the response of younger artists to the Modernist revelations of Roger Fry’s two great French Post-Impressionist exhibitions of 1910 and 1912 – the Camden Town Group, the Fitzroy Street Group and the Allied Artists’ Association in particular - in their turn reacted against the by now largely establishment New English. -
The EY Exhibition. Van Gogh and Britain
Life & Times Exhibition The EY Exhibition and his monumental Van Gogh and Britain London: a Pilgrimage. Tate Britain, London, Whistler’s Nocturnes 27 March 2019 to 11 August 2019 and Constable’s country landscapes also made a VINCENT IN LONDON considerable impression London seems to have been the springboard on him. Yet he did not for Vincent van Gogh’s creative genius. He start painting until he trained as an art dealer at Goupil & Cie in had unsuccessfully tried The Hague, coming to the company’s Covent his hand at teaching and Garden office in 1873, aged 20. He lodged in preaching. South London, initially in Brixton, and for a He returned to the short time stayed at 395 Kennington Road, Netherlands at the age of just a few minutes from my old practice 23, where, in 1880, after in Lambeth Walk. He soaked up London further unsatisfactory life and loved to read Zola, Balzac, Harriet forays into theology and Beecher Stowe, and, above all, Charles missionary work, his Dickens. This intriguing exhibition opens art dealer brother Theo movingly with a version of L’Arlésienne encouraged him to start (image right), in which Dickens’s Christmas drawing and painting. Stories and Uncle Tom’s Cabin lie on the Van Gogh’s earliest table. paintings were almost He became familiar with the work of pastiches of Dutch British illustrators and printmakers, and landscape masters, but, as he absorbed Vincent van Gogh (1853–1890), L’Arlésienne, 1890. Oil paint on canvas, 650 × also that of Gustav Doré (below is van 540 mm. -
View the Press Release
DAVIS & LANGDALE COMPANY, INC. 231 EAST 60TH STREET NEW YORK, NY 10022 PHONE 212 838 0333 FAX 212 752 7764 PRESS RELEASE / ART LISTING November 16, 2018 Woman in Green Coat and Black Hat Curled Up Sleeping Tortoise-Shell Cat Flowers and Foliage in Blue & Pink Vase Gouache on paper Wash and pencil on paper Gouache on paper 8 13/16 x 6 7/8 inches 8 5/8 x 9 7/8 inches 7 1/8 x 5 3/4 inches Probably executed1920s Executed 1904 - 1908 Probably executed during the late 1920s DAVIS & LANGDALE COMPANY, 231 EAST 60TH STREET, NEW YORK, announces its new exhibition: GWEN JOHN: WATERCOLORS AND DRAWINGS which will open Friday, November 16, and continue through Saturday, December 8, 2018. A reception will be held on Wednesday December 5, 2018 from 5pm – 7pm. This exhibition will be the final show at 231 East 60th Street; after January 1, 2019, Davis & Langdale will be open by appointment only at a new location. The exhibition will consist of twenty-five works on paper, all of which have just been released from the artist’s estate and have never been previously shown. They include gouaches of women and children in church, drawings of the poet and critic Arthur Symons and of the artist’s friend Chloe Boughton-Leigh, images of peasant boys and girls, watercolors of cats, still lifes, and landscapes. GWEN JOHN (1876 – 1939) is one of the foremost British artists of the twentieth century. Born in Wales, she was the sister of the also famous Augustus John. -
Modern British and Irish Art Wednesday 28 May 2014
Modern British and irish art Wednesday 28 May 2014 MODERN BRITISH AND IRISH ART Wednesday 28 May 2014 at 14.00 101 New Bond Street, London duBlin Viewing Bids enquiries CustoMer serViCes (highlights) +44 (0) 20 7447 7448 London Monday to Friday 08.30 to 18.00 Sunday 11 May 12.00 - 17.00 +44 (0) 20 7447 4401 fax Matthew Bradbury +44 (0) 20 7447 7448 Monday 12 May 9.00 - 17.30 To bid via the internet please +44 (0) 20 7468 8295 Tuesday 13 May 9.00 - 17.30 visit bonhams.com [email protected] As a courtesy to intending bidders, Bonhams will provide a london Viewing Please note that bids should be Penny Day written Indication of the physical New Bond Street, London submitted no later than 4pm on +44 (0) 20 7468 8366 condition of lots in this sale if a Thursday 22 May 14.00 - 19.30 the day prior to the sale. New [email protected] request is received up to 24 Friday 23 May 9.30 - 16.30 bidders must also provide proof hours before the auction starts. Saturday 24 May 11.00 - 15.00 of identity when submitting bids. Christopher Dawson This written Indication is issued Tuesday 27 May 9.30 - 16.30 Failure to do this may result in +44 (0) 20 7468 8296 subject to Clause 3 of the Notice Wednesday 28 May 9.30 - 12.00 your bid not being processed. [email protected] to Bidders. Live online bidding is available Ingram Reid illustrations sale number for this sale +44 (0) 20 7468 8297 Front cover: lot 108 21769 Please email [email protected] [email protected] Back cover: lot 57 with ‘live bidding’ in the subject Inside front cover: lot 13 Catalogue line 48 hours before the auction Jonathan Horwich Inside back cover: lot 105 £20.00 to register for this service Global Director, Picture Sales Opposite: lot 84 +44 (0) 20 7468 8280 [email protected] Please note that we are closed Monday 26 May 2014 for the Irish Representative Spring Bank Holiday Jane Beattie +353 (0) 87 7765114 iMportant inforMation [email protected] The United States Government has banned the import of ivory into the USA. -
“Uproar!”: the Early Years of the London Group, 1913–28 Sarah Macdougall
“Uproar!”: The early years of The London Group, 1913–28 Sarah MacDougall From its explosive arrival on the British art scene in 1913 as a radical alternative to the art establishment, the early history of The London Group was one of noisy dissent. Its controversial early years reflect the upheavals associated with the introduction of British modernism and the experimental work of many of its early members. Although its first two exhibitions have been seen with hindsight as ‘triumphs of collective action’,1 ironically, the Group’s very success in bringing together such disparate artistic factions as the English ‘Cubists’ and the Camden Town painters only underlined the fragility of their union – a union that was further threatened, even before the end of the first exhibition, by the early death of Camden Town Group President, Spencer Gore. Roger Fry observed at The London Group’s formation how ‘almost all artist groups’, were, ‘like the protozoa […] fissiparous and breed by division. They show their vitality by the frequency with which they split up’. While predicting it would last only two or three years, he also acknowledged how the Group had come ‘together for the needs of life of two quite separate organisms, which give each other mutual support in an unkindly world’.2 In its first five decades this mutual support was, in truth, short-lived, as ‘Uproar’ raged on many fronts both inside and outside the Group. These fronts included the hostile press reception of the ultra-modernists; the rivalry between the Group and contemporary artists’ -
Augustus John
Augustus John: An Inventory of His Collection at the Harry Ransom Center Descriptive Summary Creator: John, Augustus, 1878-1961 Title: Augustus John Art Collection Dates: 1903-1946 Extent: 1 box (10 items) Abstract: The Collection consists of ten portraits on paper (drawings, etchings, and reproductive prints) of well-known English contemporaries of John, including James Joyce, Ottoline Morrell, and W. B. Yeats. Access: Open for research. A minimum of twenty-four hours is required to pull art materials to the Reading Room. Administrative Information Acquisition: Purchases (R938, R1252, R3785, R4731, R5180) and gift (R2767) Processed by: Helen Young, 1997 Repository: Harry Ransom Center, The University of Texas at Austin John, Augustus, 1878-1961 Biographical Sketch Augustus Edwin John was born January 4, 1878, at Tenby, Pembrokeshire, to Edwin William John and Augusta Smith. In 1894 he began four years of studies at the Slade School of Fine Art in London, where he worked under Henry Tonks and Frederick Brown. During his time at the Slade School, John also studied the works of the Old Masters at the National Gallery. After suffering a head injury while swimming at Pembrokeshire in 1897, the quality of John's artwork, as well as his appearance and personality, changed. His methodical style became freer and bolder, and his work started to gain notice. In 1898, John won the Slade Prize for his Moses and the Brazen Serpent . John left the Slade School in 1898, and he held his first one-man exhibition in 1899 at the Carfax Gallery in London. Later that same year he traveled on the continent, part of the time with a group consisting of the artist brothers Sir William Rothenstein and Albert Rutherston, William Orpen, Sir Charles Conder, and Ida Nettleship (a fellow Slade student).