The Tempera Revival - Part One (1894 - 1934)

The current exhibition at the National Gallery: Hockney and Piero, A Longer Look, (by Susanna Avery-Quash, with contributions by Martin Gayford, David Hockney and Sacha Llewellyn) seems like the perfect occasion to take closer look at the Tempera Revival that blossomed British Art in the 20th century, especially in the work of the Rome Scholar and promotion of Mural and Decorative Art in the three principal Art Schools of the interwar years: The Slade School of Fine Art, The Royal Collage Art and The Royal Academy. This on-line exhibition takes a look not only at the work of many of the key protagonists – Armfield, Gere, Knights, Monnington, Burleigh, Leet, but many of the artists who emulated the essentially flat, dry chalk tempera feeling of tempera, in other media such as gouache and unvarnished oil.

Although Tempera had been out of favour since the end of the Renaissance, when it was gradually replaced by oil paint, British artists such as William Blake (1757-1827), and the Pre-Raphaelites were passionate advocates of the medium. In 1901 Christiana Herringham (1852-1929) together with Joseph Southall (1861-1944) and Marianne Stokes (1855-1927), formed the Society of Painters in Tempera centred around artists of the Birmingham School: Maxwell Armfield (1881-1972), Arthur Gaskin (1862-1928), Charles March Gere (1869-1957), Margaret Gere (1878-1965), and Frederick Cayley Robinson (1862-1927). In the 20th century, Britain tempera was also popular amongst Rome Scholars and its faculty members, including Charles Sims (1872-1928), Winifred Knights (1899-1947), Thomas Monnington (1902-1976), Reginald Brill (1902-1974), and muralists such as Mary Adshead (1904-1995) and Barbara Jones (1912-1978).

Tempera can survive the passage of time better than oil paintings – this is especially the case with early Italian egg tempera, which is usually characterised by an almost enamelled appearance. In the 20th century however, egg tempera was often only lightly bound (resulting in a chalky quality), closer in character to watercolour.

The term tempera refers to any painting medium consisting of coloured pigments mixed with a water-soluble binder. Egg tempera, the most common form, consists of pigments bound by egg yolk. On account of its binder, tempera tends to have a matt surface, and, unlike oil, is usually not varnished when finished. Typically painted on a panel prepared with gesso (rather than a canvas), tempera paintings often have sharper defined contours and smoother surfaces. Unlike oil, tempera does not afford areas of impasto (textured paint). Tempera dries fast and therefore colours cannot be blended. Modelling is achieved by laying down innumerable individual brushstrokes of graduated colour adjacent to each other. Many artists working in tempera felt attracted to the labour intensive idea of preparing their own colours, grinding raw pigments with a mortar and pestle.

Works FEATURED in this Exhibition

Walter Bayes (1869–1955)
A Devonshire Creek
£700
Jessie Bayes (1878 - 1970)
Mother and Child, 1920s
Jessie Bayes (1878 - 1970)
Three Sisters, 1920s
Jessie Bayes (1878 - 1970)
A Garden Enclosed, 1920s
Charles Sims (1873 - 1928)
The Muses
£9,500
Herbert Edward Peart (1881-)
Mid-Summer Hill
£1,900
Sold
James Tarr (1905 - 1996)
Monday
Reserved
John Armstrong (1893 - 1973)
Washing Day, 1927
Sold
Averil Mary Burleigh (1883 - 1949)
Rest by the Way
Joseph Southall (1861 - 1944)
Anna Elizabeth Baker (study for The Coral Necklace), c.1894
£6,800
Margaret Gere (1878 - 1965)
The Baptism
£6,800
Private
Douglas Percy Bliss (1900 - 1984)
Self Portait, 1923
Charles Sims (1873 - 1928)
My Pain Beneath Your Sheltering Hand, c.1928
Private
Charles Sims (1873 - 1928)
Man’s Last Pretence of Consummation in Indifference, c.1928
John Cecil Stephenson (1889 - 1965)
Abstraction, 1934
£50,000
Sold
Winifred Knights (1899 - 1947)
Landscape with Fence, c. 1920
Sold
Joseph Southall (1861 - 1944)
Visitors to an Exhibition: Design for a Poster
Sold
Charles Mahoney (1903 - 1968)
Study for the Morley College mural
Sold
John Moody (1906 - 1993)
Margaret Sewell, 1927
Sold
Edward Halliday (1902 - 1984)
Roof-terrace of the British School at Rome, 1926
Percy Shakespeare (1906 - 1943)
The Rasp Grinders, 1930
£35,000
Private
Robert Austin (1895 - 1973)
Child in bed, 1930
Sold
Maxwell Armfield (1881 - 1972)
Pacific Portrait, c.1915’22
Sold
Maxwell Armfield (1881 - 1972)
Datura in Bronze
Sold
Maxwell Armfield (1881 - 1972)
Winter Wood
Sir Thomas Monnington (1902 - 1976)
Nocera Umbra, 1925
£18,000
Charles Mahoney (1903 - 1968)
Study for The Clock and The Dial, mural at Brockley County School (now Prendergast – Hilly Fields School) 1935
£2,500
Sold
Joseph Southall (1861 - 1944)
The Agate (Portrait of the Artist and his Wife), 1911
Guided by Matchless Fortitude, To Peace and Truth Thy Glorious Way Hast Ploughed, 1919
£2,500
Sold
Margaret Gere (1878 - 1965)
The Kitchen Range, circa 1910
Sold
Two nudes standing by a river, circa 1920
Private
Sir Thomas Monnington (1902 - 1976)
Study for Christ meeting the woman of Samaria at the well, for Kippen Kirk, circa 1930
Private
Winifred Knights (1899 - 1947)
Study for the Marriage at Cana, circa 1923
Private
John Armstrong (1893 - 1973)
The bird, circa 1927