William Strang (1859 - 1921)

The Listener, 1916

SKU: 11941
Signed and dated Oil on canvas

Size:
Height – 114.3cm
Width – 99cm

DESCRIPTION

Provenance:
The Fortunoff collection [HF 32]
Presentation:
framed
Exhibited:
1916, International Society, Summer Exhibition; 1917, Glasgow Institute of Fine Arts; 1921 Fine Art Society, ‘William Strang Memorial Exhibition’. 1981 Graves Art Gallery, Sheffield, Glasgow Museums and Art Galleries, National Portrait Gallery, London, cat no 26.
Literature:
William Strang RA 1859-1921, Sheffield City Art Galleries, page 50.
“There is”, wrote ‘Tis’ (Colour Magazine, September 1916), “that picture of his entitled ‘The Listener’. It represents apparently a coster girl listening to the love offer of a coaster. But they are not really coster types, nor are their costumes really coster costumes. Strang s’en fiche: he was concerned with the great fundamental of love-making: he, according to his own explanation, was intent only upon things that matter; hence the plain background, the diagrammatic still-life, the contempt for textures”.

 

It was in works like this that Strang returned to the interests that had stimulated his most successful early works, the ‘Adam and Eve’ series (1899-1901), where his concern was primarily in simplifying form and colour, and subordinating technique to serve the expressive needs of the subject. The Post-Impressionist exhibitions of 1910 and 1911 had revived this interest, in more contemporary terms, and introduced to him the possibility of a more arbitrary use of colour. The work of Augustus John is an obvious influence in the choice and composition of the coster girl, whilst the still-life of fruit and vegetables relate to an earlier work by his Slade contemporary, W.Y. MacGregor, ‘The Vegetable Stall’ (1884, National Gallery of Scotland).
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THE ARTIST

William Strang
William
Strang
1859 - 1921

Born Dumbarton, 13 Feb 1859; died Bournemouth, 12 April 1921. Scottish painter and printmaker. Following a brief apprenticeship with a shipbuilding firm in Clydesdale, he entered the Slade School of Art (1876) where he adhered to the uncompromising realism advocated by his teacher Alphonse Legros. After completing his studies at the Slade (1880), Strang became Legros’s assistant in the printmaking class for a year. For the next 20 years he worked primarily as an etcher. His etchings include landscapes in the tradition of Rembrandt, pastoral themes indebted to Giorgione and macabre genre subjects, marked by a sense of tension and suspended animation. He also etched 150 portraits of leading artistic and literary figures. The commitment to realism and psychological intensity that characterizes the best of Strang’s etched work is also evident in the paintings that dominated the latter half of his career. The influence of the Belgian and French Symbolists’ work and Strang’s growing confidence in the handling of colour combined in his mature style with a linear clarity and schematic colouring that is best seen in such works as Bank Holiday (1912; London, Tate). His oil portraits, for example Vita Sackville-West as Lady In a Red Hat (1918; Glasgow, A.G. & Mus.), are strikingly potent images of their time. An important collection of Strang’s graphic work is in the Art Gallery and Museum in Glasgow. His sons Ian Strang (1886’1952) and David Strang (born 1887) were also printmakers.

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