Eric Ravilious, Dangerous Work at Low Tide, 1940, MOD Art Collection |
Enjoyment, after all, is what it's about. Yes, I think there is a lot more to Ravilious than meets the eye, but you don't need an art history degree to appreciate his work. Here's the scoop from the Dulwich press department:
Eric Ravilious, Westbury Horse, 1939, Towner |
Dulwich Picture Gallery will present a major show of work by the celebrated artist and designer,
Eric Ravilious (1903-42), with a unique focus on his output as a watercolourist. Featuring iconic paintings such as Westbury Horse (1939) and Train Landscape (1940) alongside rarely
seen works from private collections, ‘Ravilious’ (1 April-31
August 2015) will follow the evolution of a
remarkable talent and cement the artist’s position as one of the finest
watercolourists of the 20th century.
This exhibition will adopt a thematic approach to a career which spanned
peace and war, breaking down the chronology which often separates the two
periods. This will highlight how Ravilious integrated rather than abandoned
many of his ideas and instincts when he was appointed as an official War Artist
in 1939. A focused selection of over 90 watercolours,
complemented by selected lithographs, wood engravings and archive materials, will
highlight common characteristics in Ravilious’s painting, ultimately bringing us closer to understanding
the motives and ideas of an artist who famously said little about his work.
From a boyhood spent in his father’s
antiques shop to being taught by Paul Nash at the Royal College of Art, various
experiences influenced Ravilious’s style and adoption of particular motifs. The exhibition starts with ‘Relics and
Curiosities’: paintings which reveal
Ravilious’s fascination with interesting objects such as in No. 29 Bus (1934) and Talbot-Darracq (1934). This theme is
revisited in the rarely displayed nautical still life Anchor
and Boats, Rye
(1938) and later in wartime paintings such as Bomb Defusing Equipment (1941)
where he approaches military hardware from unusual angles to capture the
strangeness of objects.
‘Interiors’ highlights another
thread to Ravilious’ work where neatly made beds, empty chairs and patterned
wallpaper recur in his paintings Farmhouse
Bedroom (1930) and Interior at
Furlongs (1939). Ravilious' domestic scenes rarely contain figures and yet
his shadowy interiors, strange perspectives and objects often create a sense of
human presence. Ravilious excelled in balancing interior and exterior worlds, an
element that recurs in his wartime pictures
such as The Operations Room (1942).
Eric Ravilious, Anchor and Boats, Rye Harbour, 1938, private collection |
The exhibition continues to
emphasize common themes in Ravilious’s
oeuvre; ‘Figures & Forms’ highlights
Ravilious’s rare but sensitive portrayal of people, such as in his studies for
the mural for Morley College (1928-1930)and in his timeless visual records of
men at war. In ‘Place and Season’ we see how Ravilious often combined
topography, atmospheric conditions and light to record the often unusual
locations he travelled to and in ‘Changing Perspectives’ we follow the evolution
in Ravilious’s handling of composition and perspective, as he moves from more
novel subjects to painting well known landmarks such as the White Horse of Westbury.
The
exhibition culminates with an exploration of the artist’s career-long interest
in light. Displaying the fireworks of November
5th (1933) next to the gunflashes of HMS Ark Royal in Action (1940), reveals how Ravilious treated both as
exciting visual spectacles. In moving from peacetime paintings such as Rye Harbour (1938) to wartime works such as Midnight
Sun (1940), we follow the artist on a journey of discovery as he sought new
ways to capture the light of early morning.
Curator
James Russell said:
“This exhibition has given me the
opportunity to look more closely at familiar paintings, and to explore others
for the first time. I love Ravilious's playfulness, and the subtle,
surreptitious use of distorted geometries in his paintings, and the fact that
he made so little public comment about his own work. In some ways this has made
my job more difficult, but at the same time it is liberating: anyone can enjoy
the work of Eric Ravilious, but there is also plenty there for people who want
to go deeper”
While acknowledged as a fine wood
engraver and designer, Ravilious saw painting as his true vocation; it was this
work that he exhibited, and he cared deeply about its reception by fellow
artists. His 1939 show, at the prestigious Tooth and Sons’ Gallery in London,
was greeted warmly by critics, who described his work as ‘almost
untranslatable’ and ‘magic, almost mystic’. Two-thirds of the twenty-seven
paintings displayed are included in the exhibition.
Loans have been secured from a
number of lenders including Towner, The Fry Art Gallery, Aberdeen Art Gallery,
Imperial War Museum, Tate, Leeds Museums and Galleries, Royal College of Art,
The British Council, as well as multiple private lenders.
With Philip
Wilson Publishers, Dulwich Picture Gallery with produce a fully illustrated
colour catalogue to accompany the exhibition. Author
James Russell explores the evolution of a remarkable talent and offers an
intimate portrait of the artist, making this a definitive guide to the
luminous, evocative and timeless watercolours of Eric Ravilious.
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