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John Nash: Artist and Countryman
Hardback
Main Details
Title |
John Nash: Artist and Countryman
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Authors and Contributors |
By (author) Andrew Lambirth
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Physical Properties |
Format:Hardback | Pages:256 | Dimensions(mm): Height 300,Width 235 |
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Category/Genre | Painting and paintings Individual artists and art monographs |
ISBN/Barcode |
9781916495708
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Classifications | Dewey:759.2 |
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Audience | |
Illustrations |
200 colour illustrations
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Publishing Details |
Publisher |
Unicorn Publishing Group
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Imprint |
Unicorn Publishing Group
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Publication Date |
24 October 2019 |
Publication Country |
United Kingdom
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Description
John Nash (1893-1977) is the quintessential 20th century painter of the English countryside, but his remarkable achievement has for too long been overshadowed by the more public persona of his older brother Paul. Yet when we want to summon up an image of an idyllic summer's day, it is John's 1919 painting Th e Cornfield that we remember, not one of Paul's. Nash began as a watercolour painter, and the medium remained his mainstay throughout a long career. He also worked regularly in oil paint, and his two great World War I paintings, Oppy Wood and Over the Top, both in the Imperial War Museum, are early examples of his success with this very different technique. An immensely skilled draughtsman, Nash turned this linear expertise to good effect in his wood engravings. He also excelled at comic drawing. A dedicated gardener and plantsman, his botanical studies are of real quality. As Andrew Lambirth remarks, `In Nash's best work the vision is clear, the eye sharp and the sense of pictorial design difficult to fault'.
Author Biography
Andrew Lambirth (born 1959) is a writer, critic and curator. He has written on art for a number of publications including The Sunday Telegraph, The Spectator, The Sunday Times, Modern Painters, The Art Newspaper and RA, the Royal Academy magazine. Among his many books are monographs on Craigie Aitchison, Stephen Chambers, Roger Hilton, Allen Jones, Maggi Hambling, David Inshaw, John Hoyland, Margaret Mellis, LS Lowry and RB Kitaj. He has curated exhibitions of work by Eileen Agar, Peter Blake, Maggi Hambling, Roger Hilton and Cedric Morris for various museums and public galleries. He was art critic of The Spectator 2002-2014 and his reviews have been collected in a paperback entitled A is a Critic. He lives in Wiltshire.
Reviews"Lambirth, in this well-illustrated monograph, forswears biography and keeps John Nash's art very much to the fore, yet provides a rounded portrait of his life, character and relationships. It is a considerable achievement. . . . In the course of telling us much about Nash's social and artistic world, Lambirth reanimates not only this artist but many others within the history of 20th-century landscape painting. . . . Lambirth revives Nash's stature as an artist. . . . [He] not only successfully integrates Nash's life and art, but he brings to the fore a different set of virtues from those that belonged to his more cerebral and restlessly ambitious older brother."-- "Apollo" "Lambirth is an adroit guide to this particularly English painter whose greatest inspiration was the beguiling if undemonstrative countryside of Suffolk."-- "Sunday Times" "This is a diligent, thoroughly researched account, packed with detail, enlivened by letters and the recollections of Nash's contemporaries. . . . John Nash: Artist and Countryman is valuable for the superb illustrations, beautifully reproduced throughout, and supplemented by a gallery of works that Lambirth found in the course of his research and could not fit into the text, many in private collections."-- "Times Literary Supplement"
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