Walter Crane, R.W.S. (1845-1915)

Details
Walter Crane, R.W.S. (1845-1915)

Flora

signed with monogram; pencil, watercolour and bodycolour heightened with white on oatmeal paper
9¾ x 13¾in. (248 x 350mm.)
Provenance
With The Fine Art Society, London
Literature
Isobel Spencer, Walter Crane, 1975, p. 182
Exhibited
Société des XX, Brussels, 1891

Lot Essay

The watercolour was painted in 1891 and exhibited the same year at the controversial Société des XX in Brussels, where it hung in the compnay of apingins by Van Gogh and sculpture and ceramics by Gauguin. It recalls Crane's books with floral themes, Flora's Feast (1889) and A Floral Fantasy in an Old English Garden (1899), and although it was not published in either, details such as the clipped hedges, cypress trees and classical architechure, all reflecting his love of Italy, which he visited often from 1871, have parallels in his books and paintings. The design is reminiscent of a backcloth or stage set, and Crane was indeed involved from time to time in teh staging of masques and pageants. The most important was Beauty's Awakening, A Masque of Winter and Spring, performed by the Art Workers' Guild in the Guildhall, London, in June 1899

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