Title : British Realism from the 1920s and '30s
link : British Realism from the 1920s and '30s
British Realism from the 1920s and '30s
The National Galleries of Scotland are currently hosting an exhibit called True to Life: British Realist Painting in the 1920s and 1930s.The Yellow Glove by James Cowie (Scottish, 1886 - 1956) |
A City Garden, 1940, by James McIntosh Patrick © The artist's estate / Bridgeman Images. |
"...precise, hard-edged and graphic, and with minimal narrative detail, as opposed to loose and painterly. The Germans call it Neue Sachlichkeit [New Objectivity], and the Americans call it Magic Realism. British art of this sort doesn’t have a name, which is maybe one reason why it doesn’t win much attention. Art history tends to award points, as it were, to artists who introduce change. So the first artists to go abstract, or use film, or go minimalist, are viewed as important."
Why War? by Charles Spencelayh, 1938, oil on canvas, 94 x 115 cm. |
Harbour Crowd by Keith Henderson (1883–1982)
The curators say that an exhibit like this would have been hard to put together before the days of the internet because the works were sold through galleries, and the trail of custody was not well known. But thanks to the website ArtUK, which documents all the paintings in public collections in Great Britain, it has become possible to know where they ended up.
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The show will be on view through October 29, 2017
Online essay: Short statement from the curators
Catalog: True To Life: British Realist Painting in the 1920s and 1930s
Previously on GurneyJourney: Magic Realism
Thanks, Sue Arnold, for telling me about it.
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