Reserved

John Armstrong (1893 - 1973)

Washing Day, 1927

SKU: 11711
Signed and dated

Size:
Height – 52cm
Width – 53cm

DESCRIPTION

Presentation:
framed
Exhibitied:
Leceister Galleries, (9), 1928
literature:
Eve, The Ladies Pictorial, 1/2/1928; John Armstrong, The Paintings, Andrew, Lambirth, Philip, Wilson publishers, 2009

Tempera
Signed and dated 1927
52 x 54 cm

Washing Day was included in John Armstrong’s first one-man show at the Leicester Galleries in 1928. This ‘triumphantly original’ picture (as described by Anthony Bertram in The Studio, 1928), with its Constructivist, intersecting planes, was more advanced than anything being made in Britain at the time

Armstrong sold more than half of the 36 exhibits on display at the Gallery. Buyers included Eddie Marsh, an impassioned collective committee member – along with Samuel Courtauld – of the Contemporary Art Society, of which Howard de Walden was president.

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THE ARTIST

John Armstrong
John
Armstrong
1893 - 1973

Painter of imaginative and classical subjects in oil, tempera and gouache; mural painter; designer of film and stage sets; book illustrator and advertising designer. He was born in Hastings, Sussex. After Oxford University, Armstrong studied at St John’s Wood School of Art, 1913-14, then after service in the Army in World War I returned to St John’s Wood briefly. He held his first one-man show at the Leicester Galleries in 1928. In 1933 he became a member of Unit One, after which his work took on a surrealist character. In the 1930s Armstrong worked as a designer for theatre and film, including the first performance of the ballet Façade and several films made by Sir Alexander Korda. He also did work for Shell-Mex and ICI. During World War II Armstrong was an Official War Artist. For the Festival of Britain 1951, he was commissioned to produce The Storm, and exhibited extensively at the RA from that year. He painted a ceiling for the Council Chamber, Bristol, in 1955 and six years later a mural for the Royal Marsden Hospital, at Sutton, Surrey. Armstrong had strong left-wing political convictions and from the time of the Spanish Civil War, when he painted Pro Patria, his pictures occasionally reflected his views. Symbolism is also a feature of his work. Armstrong’s pictures are fastidiously painted in muted colours and reflect his own dry wit and gentle nature. Along with John Banting, he is one of only a handful of British artists whose oeuvre can be correctly described as surrealist. The RA held a memorial exhibition in 1975. He lived in London.

MORE PICTURES BY ARTIST

Reserved
John Armstrong (1893 - 1973)
Washing Day, 1927
Sold
John Armstrong (1893 - 1973)
The Peculiar Park, Royal Marsden Hospital in Sutton, Surrey, 1961
Sold
John Armstrong (1893 - 1973)
The Peculiar Park, study for the Royal Marsden Hospital in Sutton, Surrey, 1961
John Armstrong (1893 - 1973)
The Peculiar Park Mural at Shell Centre, 1961
£2,400
John Armstrong (1893 - 1973)
The Peculiar Park Mural at Shell Centre, 1961
£1,950
John Armstrong (1893 - 1973)
Suggested Design for The Pleasure of Living, Shell Centre London Circa 1961
£2,150
Sold
John Armstrong (1893 - 1973)
Design for The Pleasure of Living Mural at Shell Centre, c.1961
Sold
John Armstrong (1893 - 1973)
Studies for Royal Marsden Hospital in Sutton, Surrey, 1961
John Armstrong (1893 - 1973)
Suggested Decoration for The Pleasures of Living mural, Shell Centre, circa 1961
£2,510
Private
John Armstrong (1893 - 1973)
The bird, circa 1927