WILLIAM SCOTT, R.A. (1913-1989)
WILLIAM SCOTT, R.A. (1913-1989)
WILLIAM SCOTT, R.A. (1913-1989)
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PROPERTY FROM AN AMERICAN ESTATE
WILLIAM SCOTT, R.A. (1913-1989)

Still Life with Bowl and Olives

细节
WILLIAM SCOTT, R.A. (1913-1989)
Still Life with Bowl and Olives
signed 'W. SCOTT' (lower right)
oil on canvas
20 x 24 in. (50.8 x 61 cm.)
Painted in 1950.
来源
Henry Cliffe, possibly given as a wedding present by the artist, and by descent.
Anonymous sale; Phillips, London, 4 June 1996, lot 38.
with Offer Waterman and Jonathan Clark Fine Art, London.
with Archeus Fine Art, London, where purchased by the present owner.
出版
R. Ingleby, 'Great Scott', Art Review, Vol. XLIX, April 1997, pp. 37-38, illustrated, as 'Still Life with Bowl of Cherries and Olives, 1950'.
S. Whitfield (ed.), William Scott: Catalogue Raisonné of Oil Paintings 1931-1951, Vol. 1, London, 2013, p. 257, no. 181, illustrated.
展览
London, Jonathan Clark Fine Art, Spring Exhibition of Modern British Paintings, April 1997, p. 28, exhibition not numbered, illustrated, as 'Still Life with Bowl of Cherries and Olives, 1950'.

荣誉呈献

Pippa Jacomb
Pippa Jacomb Director, Head of Day Sale

拍品专文

William Scott met Henry Cliffe (1919-1983), painter, sculptor, printmaker and teacher, in Wales during WWII. Based on the army’s assumption that trained artists made good cartographers, they had both been stationed at Ruabon, Wrexham County, where they used lithographic techniques to produce aerial maps. Here they were given time to sketch and paint, and an arts club was formed.

After the war, Scott became Senior Painting Master at Bath Academy of Art in Corsham, Wiltshire. Roughly two years later, he invited Cliffe to run the academy’s print-making department. Scott and Cliffe were in good company: Sir Terry Frost, Bryan Wynter, Tom Phillips and Peter Lanyon were also part of this remarkable group of teachers who were so important to the Post-War British art scene. Cliffe’s career started strong: he was chosen to represent Britain at the Venice Biennale twice, initially alongside artists including Francis Bacon, Lucian Freud and Ben Nicholson at the 1954 edition, and later as one of only four other artists at the 1960 edition. Redfern Gallery hosted his first ever one-man exhibition in 1956, and St George’s Gallery his second one in 1960, both leading London galleries at the time.

It was shortly after Cliffe joined Corsham, most likely in the early 1950s, that he married his colleague Valerie May. The present work was likely a wedding present from Scott to the new couple, given that it was received by Cliffe early on in their friendship and was not exhibited or seen for almost fifty years after this, in 1996. This rather uplifting story only adds to the charm of the painting itself, an early example of Scott’s mature style – in which domestic objects are distilled into elemental forms and arranged in quiet balance – and yet also of his engagement with the early French still life tradition, particularly the work of Braque or Vuillard. As such, Still Life with Bowl and Olives ranks as an important product from Scott’s mid-career, in which he began to transition from more figurative representation to a poetic abstraction.

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