This is an edited extract from 'Ravilious: Wood Engravings', which will be published by The Mainstone Press at the beginning of November. The book will be launched on November 7th at Pallant House Gallery, where I will give an illustrated talk on Rav's fascinating career as a wood engraver...
Wednesday, 23 October 2013
Eric Ravilious: Gilbert White of Selborne
Few British books are as well-loved as Gilbert White’s Natural History of
Selborne. As a teacher in the mid-1920s Ravilious had urged his students to
read it, and he was delighted by this commission. The title page probably shows
White and Thomas Pennant, otherwise the illustrations are all carefully rooted
in the text. Below we see a boy stealing a
honey-buzzard egg from ‘a tall slender beech’ and ‘considerable falls of snow,
which lay deep and uniform on the ground without any drifting, wrapping
up the more humble vegetation in perfect security’. The illustration above
accompanies the words, ‘A good ornithologist should be able to distinguish
birds by their air as well as by their colours and shape; on the ground as well as
on the wing, and in the bush as well as in the hand.’ It shows, particularly in the
barn owl depicted against the stars, how deeply Ravilious absorbed the vision
of his great forerunner, Thomas Bewick.
This is an edited extract from 'Ravilious: Wood Engravings', which will be published by The Mainstone Press at the beginning of November. The book will be launched on November 7th at Pallant House Gallery, where I will give an illustrated talk on Rav's fascinating career as a wood engraver...
This is an edited extract from 'Ravilious: Wood Engravings', which will be published by The Mainstone Press at the beginning of November. The book will be launched on November 7th at Pallant House Gallery, where I will give an illustrated talk on Rav's fascinating career as a wood engraver...
Wednesday, 16 October 2013
Tuesday, 15 October 2013
Paul Klee: Pure Pleasure
Paul Klee, Der Goldfisch (The Goldfish), 1925 |
Paul Klee, Flora auf Sand (Flora on Sand), 1927 |
Paul Klee, Alter Klang (Ancient Harmony), 1925 |
Paul Klee, Kuhlung in einem Garten der heissen Zone (Cooling in a Garden of the Torrid Zone), 1924 |
Paul Klee, 'Florentinisches' Villen Viertel ('Florentine' Residential District), 1926 |
Paul Klee, Sie beissen an (They're Biting), 1920 |
Paul Klee, Tod und Feuer (Death and Fire), 1940 |
FFI: Tate Modern
Friday, 11 October 2013
Popular Painters: Jack Vettriano & Edward Seago
Jack Vettriano, Self-Portrait (artist's copyright) |
Jack Vettriano is that rare creature, a painter whose activities arouse strong feelings in all kinds of people, from his famous collectors and feisty fans to the critics who are shocked and appalled by his success. His current retrospective in Glasgow has attracted some negative write-ups, while his supporters have used the 21st century soapbox of the on-line comments section to air their views.
Jack Vettriano, Along Came a Spider (artist's copyright) |
'This is the answer to the question: why don't art critics take Vettriano seriously? Because there is nothing of any interest in the way he paints - Vettriano is to painting what Jeffrey Archer is to prose. Nevertheless, he is very interesting both as a person and as a phenomenon; a self-taught painter who, by depicting his own fantasies, has somehow managed to reach an audience who don't normally take any interest in art. He is also - I was pleased to discover - a very modest, articulate, friendly interviewee.'
Jack Vettriano, The Singing Butler (artist's copyright) |
I find Vettriano's case intriguing partly because I've just finished writing a book about landscape painter Edward Seago (1910-74), which will be published by Lund Humphries next year. In his lifetime Seago was hugely popular, to the extent that the queues before his exhibitions were reported in the press.
Edward Seago, The Wild Beast Show, 1932 (artist's estate/Portland Gallery) |
'Having pounced on their prey, the Seago-seekers had to stand at attention for another hour while the embargo printed in red on their invitation cards ran out: "It is regretted that no Drawings can be sold before 10am on the day of the Private View."'
Edward Seago, Winter Landscape, Norfolk , c1960 (artist's estate/Portland Gallery) |
His paintings, mostly landscapes in oils and watercolour, were immediately recognisable and often delightful. With the art world going crazy for abstraction and dour post-war introspection, art lovers looking for something enjoyable and uplifting found it in Seago, whose self-avowed mission was to record the fleeting beauties of nature. The Queen Mother and the Duke of Edinburgh were fans, even friends; the critics were not. I doubt there was an artist who outsold Seago in his pomp during the 1950s and 1960s. He handled paint with considerable skill and also wrote entertainingly, penning a number of thoughtful autobiographical books. Not all of his paintings are great, but the best of them can make you pause, look again, relax and give in to the pleasure of looking.
'Edward Seago' will be published by Lund Humphries in June 2014. His estate is represented by The Portland Gallery.
Thursday, 10 October 2013
How We Used to Live
Wonderful stuff from director Paul Kelly. Composed of footage from the British Film Institute's national archive, most of it shot between the 1950s and the 1980s and rarely seen thereafter, 'How We Used to Live' premieres at the London Film Festival on Saturday October 12th.
FFI: Heavenly Films
Monday, 7 October 2013
Ravilious Talk Dates: Pallant House, Richmond, The Fry & Dillington House
Eric Ravilious, Fireworks, 'High Street', 1938 |
First, on November 7th, I'm speaking at Pallant House Gallery in Chichester, where an exhibition devoted to Ravilious's work as a printmaker is about to open. I know Simon Martin the curator will have gathered a wonderful selection of prints, books and ephemera, and I'm looking forward to seeing how he's put the work together. I'll mostly be talking about wood engravings - and launching the new Mainstone Press book 'Ravilious: Wood Engravings' - but with excursions into lithography and the artist's designs for Wedgwood. Tickets are on sale here.
Eric Ravilious, BBC Talks Pamphlet, 1934 |
I gave a talk on 'Ravilious in Essex' at the Fry Art Gallery - or at a hall nearby - a couple of years ago, and I'm looking forward to going back on Friday November 15th. This time I'll be discussing printmaking and design in a lecture entitled 'Woodcuts & Wedgwood, Shops & Submarines: Ravilious, Designer', and I'll work in plenty of biographical material, archive photos and so on. Some of the pictures I show will no doubt appear on Christmas cards the following month...
On 1st December, finally, the Ravilious roadshow arrives at Dillington House in deepest Somerset, a wonderful place to visit on a wintry Sunday. I have to confess that I didn't realise, until I was asked to give a talk there, what a fantastic arts programme they have at Dillington. In fact my talk is part of a Big Art Weekend, with lots of other events and courses going on; I'll be showing pictures and talking in informal and (I hope) entertaining fashion about 'Eric Ravilious: Master Artist', with watercolours, wood engravings and design work on show.
If you'd like more information about any of these lectures do get in touch. And if you come along, say hello!
Friday, 4 October 2013
Art on the Hill: Art Trail Fun in Bristol
Very excited to be part of the 7th annual Art on the Hill art trail in lovely Windmill Hill. Do come along if you're in Bristol this weekend. Lots of wonderful art to enjoy, obviously, plus you get to see inside people's houses. If you've got kids/other halves who aren't interested you can leave them to amuse themselves in Victoria Park, have a cup of tea at Mrs Brown's Cafe, or go to the pub. Nowhere is more than ten minutes' walk from anywhere else, so you can slow down, relax and generally take it easy.
The sun might even shine.
We're at Venue 26, with paintings and collage by Dayna Stevens, drawings by Charlotte Murray and books by me. I have all the 'Ravilious in Pictures' titles and 'Ravilious: Submarine', plus 'Paul Nash in Pictures'. Come and say hello!
FFI: Art on the Hill
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