Eric Ravilious (1903 - 1942)

Famous Tragedy of the Rich Jew of Malta

SKU: 5497

Size:
Height – 17.8cm
Width – 10.7cm

DESCRIPTION

Presentation:
unframed

This is the original woodblocks that Eric Ravilious made to illustrate Christopher Marlowe’s Famous Tragedy of the Rich Jew in Malta, published by The Golden Hours Press, 1933.

Eric Ravilious was a master wood engraver, and his technical skill in design and cutting provided the perfect medium for his boundless imagination. Few could rival his craft in creating such meticulous landscapes or interior settings (showcased here in The Famous Tragedy), and as early as 1937, the print curator Basil Gray wrote that of modern engravers “he is certainly the most perfect.”

A print from this woodblock was exhibited at the Ashmolean in Oxford in 2o2o

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THE ARTIST

Eric Ravilious
Eric
Ravilious
1903 - 1942

Born in London he studied at the Eastbourne School of Art and at The Royal College of Art under Paul Nash, where Edward Bawden became a close friend. Initially a muralist (none of which has survived), he became widely known for his luminous watercolours, woodcuts, lithographs ‘ notably his High Street Shops executed by the Curwen Press, (published by Country Life in 1938 in a book with a text by JM Richards, husband of Peggy Angus), ceramics for Wedgewood and graphics for London Transport, as well as glass and furniture design. Much inspired by the South Downs in East Sussex, he was a frequent visitor to Furlongs, the cottage of the artist Peggy Angus. In 1930 he married fellow artist ‘Tirzah’ Garwood, they then moved to rural Essex, at first sharing a house with the Bawdens. An official World War II artist and with a commission with the Royal Marines, he died while with an RAF air sea rescue mission to Iceland. His works are in the collections of numerous British museums and art galleries, the largest holding is at the Towner Gallery, Eastbourne.

Selected Literature: Alan Powers, Eric Ravillious: Imagined Realities, Imperial War Museum, London, 2003.

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