... the museum’s permanent collection, paintings and works on paper by artists including Prunella Clough, Keith Vaughan, Graham Sutherland and Paul Nash.
Studio Internatio...
... if you think of war artists, they don’t necessarily depict the trauma so much as the concrete things that are going on in everyday life.
MH: Yes. Paul Nash did wonder...
... including his hallucinatory Curved Barn (1922) and vibrant abstraction Sussex River, near Midhurst (1965), found a place of sanctuary in Sussex after the bombing of his Lo...
... Setting art of the period within a more thorough social, cultural and political framework, Spalding brings new insights to familiar names such and Paul Nash and Stanley Sp...
... of the painter Paul Nash. Though not formally trained, he soon found himself moving in artistic circles thanks to the successful joint exhibition he staged with his brothe...
... from Paul Nash’s Equivalents for the Megaliths (1935). The plaster has been worked into a mottled texture, clearly handmade yet reminiscent of a natural cliff face. Chil...
... the Royal Academy (1999 and 2009).
From 1964, Berg had his home and studio in the Paul Nash terrace at Cambridge Gate, Regent’s Park, giving him the perfect vantage po...
... major donation includes works by Alexander Calder, Prunella Clough, Sonia Delaunay, Naum Gabo, David Hockney, Paul Nash, Gerhard Richter and Bridget Riley. Most recently, ...
... I’ve moved on a bit since. I guess it is like a war, and I’ve always thought of myself as a war artist. A lot of my work is influenced by war artists such as Paul Nash...
... with Paul Nash’s Opening (1930-31), a tantalising painting in which an empty beach is glimpsed through an assembled mass of partially open doors and apertures. It is joi...
... These motifs appear repeatedly in Reuss’s Cornish works; their surrealist undertones evoke Salvador Dalí and Giorgio de Chirico, but also the Western Front images that ...
... world war, many British painters turned inward, whether through Paul Nash’s geometric surrealism or Vanessa Bell’s essentially post-impressionist portraits.
Relative...
... company, he invited Paul Nash, Barbara Hepworth and Ben Nicholson to supply designs. Alastair was a gifted artist, textile designer and weaver in his own right, with a pa...
... and Paul Nash in creating the Oxfordshire edition of the Shell Guides, a popular, often wittily written series of books exploring the architectural sights of the British c...
... these famous artists were several painters known in their time as the East London Group; in the 1930s, they shared exhibitions with artists such as Paul Nash, Spencer Gore...
... to Hackney in east London.
DBS: Like Graham Sutherland, Paul Nash…
ES: Or even earlier. Do you see yourself as part of that lineage?
DBS: Certainly not earlier, no...
... The most important artists whose work interested over the years would include: Paul Klee, Giorgio de Chirico, Paul Nash (very early) and, later, Antoni Tàpies, Cy Twombly...
... subject matter. This removes him from currents in modern painting that could provide a more telling context than that summoned by the illustration of works by Paul Nash, t...
... Museum in London is a major retrospective, comprising more than 120 works of British first world war art. Names such as Paul Nash, Stanley Spencer and John Singer Sargent ...
... Paul Nash likened to the Nazi repression of decadent art.9
Clark’s skill as a lecturer can only be imagined, but it is arguably his TV persona that has come to define ...