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10/10/03
Winifred Nicholson in Scotland
The Dean Gallery, Edinburgh, 10 July-7 September 2003
Duff House, Banff, 8 November 2003-18 January 2004
An Tuireann, Skye, 24 January-20 March 2004
The first exhibition to fully survey the work
of Winifred Nicholson was staged by the Tate Gallery in 1987. Although
she is as well known for being the first wife of Ben Nicholson as
she is for her paintings, her career as an artist spanned 60 years.
Remarkably, little has been written about her, considering the quality
and strength of her work. The exhibition presented at the Dean Gallery
in Edinburgh this summer, now travels to Banff and the Isle of Skye.
It focuses on the work she did on her regular trips to Scotland
from the late 1940s to the 1950s, plus later works from 1980-81.
This small body of work, just 17 paintings, possesses the immediacy
and spirituality that characterises her oeuvre. She painted
landscapes and flowers with a rare understatement and spiritual
power. The trips to Scotland were made with her friend, the poet
Kathleen Raine. Raine described the meaning in Nicholson's flower
paintings:
The botanical structures of flowers didn't particularly concern
her although she had a wonderful gift of communicating the structure
of a flower with a few brush marks. She never was wrong about
it, but at the same time she didn't dwell on it. They were flowers
painted with the imagination and not with the scientific eye.
The flowers communicated a whole atmosphere
they told about
places, about the light on a certain day. They were focuses for
something total which came into every painting [which] was more
than the flowers
you didn't just look at the flowers, you
received a whole atmosphere, meaning, quality.1
Winifred Nicholson loved Scotland, especially the Highlands and
the Western Isles. The quality of light, its range and changeability
inspired some of her finest late works. She particularly loved the
Isle of Skye, South Uist and Eigg, appreciating their remoteness,
traditions and way of life. Kathleen Raine would compose poetry
while Nicholson painted. Some of Raine's poetry is on display
in the exhibition and it complements the paintings beautifully.
In 1950 Winifred Nicholson wrote to her son, from South Uist where
she was staying in a remote croft:
This is a place after my heart. I wonder if you would like it.
Not a tree, not a bush. But grey boulders, grey rocks. Grey stones,
grey mountains. And bog in between - In the bog, lochs with waterlilies,
and rare ferns that love the black peaty soil - The sea full of
grey mysterious islands and rocks, seals and seabirds. White glistening
beaches and transparent sea all the way across to Eriskay. Blue
mountains of Barra to the west - and the Cuillins far away snow
covered to the south - There are five other cottages in Glendale
and no road nearer than three miles - one comes by boat and then
walks
Peat fire, water carried from a well, everything as
primitive as you want.2
In the 1920s, Nicholson established herself as a talented flower
painter, even gaining the reputation of 'the female Van Gogh'.
The spiritual dimension of her work was recognised in a review in
The Times (6 July 1928), declaring:
Genius is not a word to be used lightly, but - on the understanding
that it applies to aptitude rather than to actual performance
- it is the only word for Mrs Winifred Nicholson as a flower painter.
She has an uncanny sense of flowers, of what they are behind their
shapes and colours, as emanations of earth, and her technical
methods are right.3
Born in 1893 in Oxford, Winifred Roberts was brought up in an artistic
milieu. Her mother was an amateur watercolourist and her maternal
grandfather, George Howard, the 9th Earl of Carlisle was an artist
and friend of the Pre-Raphaelites. Winifred studied at the Byam
Shaw School of Art in London (1919-20) and in 1920, travelled in
India where her father was Under Secretary of State. There she noticed
'how eastern art uses lilac to create sunlight'.
The bright light of India made her conscious that the sun is
the source of all light and therefore the source of all colour,
and she began to ponder deeply on the art of colour. In her article
'Unknown Colour', published in Circle in 1937, she wrote
that 'Colour
was used as melody by the Easterns' and this
phrase reveals her long held belief, initiated by her Indian experiences,
that music and colour are related abstract disciplines.4
It was also in 1920 that Winifred married Ben Nicholson, and their
artistic alliance was mutually beneficial until Winifred's death
in 1981. They travelled extensively and their first home was near
Castagnola in Switzerland. They also worked and lived in England
and visited Paris frequently. They were involved with an influential
artistic circle in Paris and liased between London artists and those
working in the French capital between the wars. In 1924 they moved
into a 17th century farmhouse near Hadrian's Wall, in Cumbria
which she kept until the end of her life. One of Ben and Winifred
Nicholson's closest friends was the artist Christopher Wood, whom
they had met in 1926. They painted together in Cornwall. Winifred
Nicholson exhibited regularly during the 1920s and became a well-respected
artist. She was also involved in the wider movement of abstract
art in London, which was largely dependent on their acquaintances
and friends in Paris. As the John Piper exhibition at the Dulwich
Gallery earlier this year revealed, there was a lively interaction
between artists in London and Paris at this stage. Winifred and
Ben Nicholson were central to this movement.
Two events disrupted Winifred's life between the years 1930-31.
Christopher Wood was killed in 1930 and, the following year, Ben
Nicholson left Winifred and their three children to live with sculptor,
Barbara Hepworth. Winifred took her children to Paris in 1932, where
she took an apartment and stayed for six years. During this time
she consolidated her friendships with leading artists of European
Modernism: Jean Hélion, Hans and Sophie Taeuber-Arp, Cesar
Domela, Jean Hugo, Piet Mondrian, Alexander Calder, Alberto Giacometti,
Georges Braque, Hans Hartung, and Constantin Brancusi.
After a remarkable early career at the centre of the modern movement,
Winifred Nicholson continued to exhibit and to paint flowers and
landscapes with a sensitivity and spirituality. The small seascapes
painted in Scotland epitomise her preoccupations with atmospheric
conditions, with water, light and colour. The Hebrides provided
an ideal environment for her. The works are essentially affirmations
of life, as indeed she viewed the actual act of creation. Life in
the Hebrides with her long-term friend Kathleen Raine (they were
friends from 1948 until Winifred's death in 1981) was 'stone
age'; they ate nettle soup, mussels, cockles and razorfish.
She loved the lack of human habitation. The animals there she regarded
as her company and she made lists in letters to her children: sheep,
rabbits, cuckoos, bats, eiderduck, sandpipers, eagles. She made
wise and amusing observations of the natural phenomena sharing a
similar sensibility as the Finnish author, Tove Jansson in the Summer
Book.
Kathleen Raine described Winifred's spirituality as a living
essence of the present moment; 'to that moment she brought
the whole of herself to meet whatever epiphany was present before
her eyes, as a gift, as it were, from the ever-flowing world'.
Raine also described the periods working with Winifred as the happiest
and most productive of her life.
'
to be with Winifred was to be with a totally committed
artist, for whom each day shed its light on a new theme for a
painting. The ever-changing light of the seasons, the flowers,
the weather, the arrivals and departures of children and grand-children,
all these gave her what she called the 'stories' of her paintings
in which she captured the day, the hour, and ever-fleeting present.'5
1. Quoted by Alice Strang, Winifred Nicholson, National Galleries
of Scotland, Edinburgh, 2003, p.41.
2. Ibid, pp.19-20.
3. Judith Colins, Winifred, The Tate Gallery, London, 1987, p.18.
4. Ibid, p.13.
5. Quoted by Alice Strang, op.cit., p.27.
Dr Janet McKenzie
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