John Nash (1893 - 1977)

Seated nude, three quarter view, eyes closed, circa 1930

£2,200

SKU: 7769
Squared and numbered
Pencil on tracing paper

Size:
Height – 28cm
Width – 20.3cm

1 in stock

DESCRIPTION

Provenance:
The Artist’s Family
Presentation:
framed

Disclaimer:
Liss Llewellyn are continually seeking to improve the quality of the information on their website. We actively undertake to post new and more accurate information on our stable of artists. We openly acknowledge the use of information from other sites including Wikipedia, artbiogs.co.uk and Tate.org and other public domains. We are grateful for the use of this information and we openly invite any comments on how to improve the accuracy of what we have posted.

THE ARTIST

John Nash
John
Nash
1893 - 1977

Painter, mainly of landscape, in oil and watercolours, wood engraver and illustrator. Born in London, the brother of the painter Paul Nash, he worked initially as a local journalist. Encouraged by Paul, he turned to art, remaining self-taught. He exhibited with his brother at the Dorien Leigh galleries, 1913, and had his first one-man show at the Goupil Gallery, 1921. By that time Nash was established as a member of the Friday Club, LG, and Cumberland Market Group. In 1914 he started to paint in oil and this, combined with his experience with the Artists’ Rifles, led to some fine pictures when he was made an Official War Artist in 1918. Oppy Wood, Evening, and Over the Top: The 1st Artists’ Rifles at Marcoing, both in the Imperial War Museum, are amongst the most memorable war images. Nash was also an Official War Artist during World War II, when he was attached to the Admiralty. Between the wars Nash established himself as an extremely fine painter of the English landscape using a style that was less dramatic than his brother Paul’s, but nevertheless winning the support and patronage of, amongst others, John Rothenstein. In 1937 he painted a mural for the Paris Exhibition. Nash taught at Ruskin School, Oxford, 1922-27, and for two long periods before and after World War II, at the Royal College of Art. Demobilised in 1944, he lived in a country cottage, Bottengoms Farmhouse, in Wormingford, near Colchester, where he developed his expertise as a plantsman and painted the East Anglian countryside. The Tate among many public galleries holds his work. In 1951 he was elected RA, where a major show of his work was held in 1967.

Selected literature
John Rothenstein, John Nash, Macdonald & Co., 1983.

MORE PICTURES BY ARTIST

Sold
John Nash (1893 - 1977)
Study of a flower head
SKU: 7769
John Nash (1893 - 1977)
Seated nude, three quarter view, eyes closed, circa 1930
£2,200
Sold
John Nash (1893 - 1977)
Study of Tradescantia
SKU: 7409
John Nash (1893 - 1977)
Study of Ruhmania (Chinese Foxgloves)
£1,250
SKU: 7293
John Nash (1893 - 1977)
Periwinkle flower study (Vinca species)
£2,800
Sold
John Nash (1893 - 1977)
Study for ‘Nocturne: Bristol Docks’, ca 1938