English painter
Edward Wadsworth
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![](//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/4/45/Self-Portrait_%2C_Edward_Wadsworth.jpg/220px-Self-Portrait_%2C_Edward_Wadsworth.jpg) Wadsworth in 1937 (self-portrait in tempera)
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Born
| Edward Alexander Wadsworth
19 October 1889
(
1889-10-19
)
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Died
| 21 June 1949
(
1949-06-22
)
(aged 59)
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Known for
| Painting
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Movement
| modernism
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Edward Alexander Wadsworth
ARA
(19 October 1889 ? 21 June 1949) was a British artist initially associated with the
Vorticism
movement. In the
First World War
he was part of a team involved in the transfer of
dazzle camouflage
designs to ships for the
Royal Navy
. After the war his maritime landscapes and still-life compositions using
tempera
were infused with a
surrealistic
mood - although he never exhibited with the British surrealists. In the early thirties and in the early forties his work was mainly abstract. He made a significant contribution to the development of modern art in Britain in the inter-war years.
Early life and study
[
edit
]
Edward Wadsworth was born on 19 October 1889 in
Cleckheaton
,
West Yorkshire
[1]
to Fred and Hannah (nee Smith) Wadsworth. His mother died of
puerperal sepsis
nine days after giving birth. His father was understandably devastated by the loss and found it difficult to relate to the baby. Fred was running the thriving family business ? Broomford Mill ? that specialised in spinning lustrous wool for weaving braids for uniforms. Edward had a lonely childhood, although his aunt, Annie, was very caring towards him. He became a boarder at Godby's School,
Ilkley
at the age of 10
[2]
and was sent to
Fettes College
in Edinburgh in 1903.
[3]
At the time Fettes had a reputation as the 'toughest school in the British Isles' and Edward 'loathed most of his time there'.
[4]
Fred Wadsworth had in mind that Edward would one day take over the business and it was probably because Broomford Mill had important clientele in Germany that Edward was sent to study engineering and the German language in
Munich
between 1906 and 1907. Edward didn't complete his engineering degree but he did learn German and most significantly he studied art in his spare time at the Knirr School. Here he learned woodcut printing and drawing. Munich was a cultural hotbed and Edward was introduced to a lively artistic and intellectual way of life. When he returned home he had decided that he wanted to be an artist ?- his father was appalled.
[5]
Art school and beyond
[
edit
]
Rotherhithe
oil on canvas c.1911
Wadsworth was now the beneficiary of a £250 a year income ? probably via a trust fund set up by his aunt Annie ?
[6]
making him financially independent of his father. He attended
Bradford
School of Art before earning a scholarship to the
Slade School of Art
, London and spent some time at
Le Havre
, prior to the start of the autumn term in 1909 .
[7]
His contemporaries at the school included
Mark Gertler
,
Stanley Spencer
,
CRW Nevinson
,
William Roberts
and
Dora Carrington
? 'one of the greatest student classes in the history of English art schools'.
[8]
and his tutors
Henry Tonks
and
Philip Wilson Steer
exhibited in an 'impressionist' style with the
New English Art Club
whilst stressing the discipline of drawing as 'an explanation of form, analysing its construction, preparation and direction [the direction of the bones]' in their teaching.
[9]
Although the cohort at the Slade was socially diverse, Wadsworth's closest friends - C.R.W. Nevinson and Adrian Allinson were from similarly wealthy backgrounds.
Wadsworth's lecturer in art history at the Slade was
Roger Fry
who brought the work of European modern artists such as
Cezanne
,
Gauguin
and
Van Gogh
to London in a major exhibition 'Manet and the Post-Impressionists' at the Grafton Galleries towards the end of 1910. Barbara Wadsworth in her biography,
A Painter's Life. Edward Wadsworth
describes him as slowly developing in style and choice of media whilst at the Slade, yet only really making a real aesthetic leap when he met up with
Wyndham Lewis
.
[10]
In 1911 he had met Fanny Mary Eveleigh ? a professional violinist and ten years older than Wadsworth ? and they married in April 1912,
[11]
prior to Wadsworth completing his time at the Slade. They set up home in Gloucester Walk off of
Kensington Church Street
. Wadsworth was starting to exhibit and had a work included in Fry's 'Second Post Impressionist Exhibition' in January 1913.
[12]
This exhibition brought '
cubist
' pictures by Picasso and Braque to London and Wadsworth was included in ' The English Group' that included Bloomsbury artists such as
Duncan Grant
, Wyndham Lewis, and Stanley Spencer
[13]
Futurism and Vorticism
[
edit
]
Edward Wadsworth and Wyndham Lewis at the Rebel Art Centre, March 1914, with
Kate Lechmere
and
Cuthbert Hamilton
(seated).
Abstract Composition
, 1915
Tate Gallery
.
Wadsworth exhibited some futurist-derived paintings at the Futurist Exhibitions at the Dore Gallery. Although a member of the committee that organised a dinner in honour of
Filippo Tommaso Marinetti
in 1913, he was one of a number of British painters in the nascent avant-garde that became increasingly disenchanted with the Italian's arrogance and jeered Marinetti's public performance of
The Battle Of Adrianople
.
[14]
Wadsworth exhibited woodcuts at the Twenty-One Gallery, London in spring 1914 and in that year he also exhibited with the
London Group
, the Allied Artists' Salon and in the 'Twentieth Century Art' exhibition at the
Whitechapel Gallery
. He was closely associated with Wyndham Lewis and 'joined' his Rebel Art Group and was a signatory of the
Vorticist
Manifesto published in
BLAST
where he contributed illustrations and supplied a review of
Kandinsky's
Concerning The Spiritual In Art
.
[15]
Wadsworth's vorticist work is now known from his bold, experimental woodcuts as all his oil paintings from 1914-1918 are now lost.
[16]
First World War
[
edit
]
Wadsworth in 1916. Photograph by Alvin Langdon Coburn
Dazzle-ships in Drydock at Liverpool
, 1919,
National Gallery of Canada
,
Ottawa
.
Thirty three days after the Vorticist Manifesto was published, war was declared on Germany. Vorticism managed to continue into 1915, with a Vorticist exhibition in June at the Dore Gallery and a second edition of
BLAST
published to coincide with the show ? Wadsworth contributed to both.
In January 1916 the Military Service Act was passed. This imposed conscription on all single men aged between 18 and 41.
[17]
Wadsworth signed up for the
Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve
on 10 June 1916
[18]
and as a temporary sub-lieutenant he was based at
Mudros
on the island of
Lemnos
,
Greece
.
Through
Norman Wilkinson's
request he returned to England in 1917 and was demobilised to enable him to become involved in Wilkinson's scheme to transfer
dazzle camouflage
designs on to Allied ships, based mainly at Liverpool. Known as
dazzle ships
, the optical effects confused enemy
U-boats
when trying to identify types of vessels and to pinpoint their direction and speed of travel.
[19]
Wadsworth produced a number of drawings and woodcuts of camouflaged ships at this time and for towards the end of the war he was commissioned by the Canadian War Memorials Fund (CWMF) to produce
Dazzle-Ships in Drydock at Liverpool
.
[20]
This monumental painting (10 feet x 12 feet) was exhibited in London, New York, Toronto and Montreal in 1919 alongside CWMF commissions from
Paul Nash
, Wyndham Lewis, William Roberts and
David Bomberg
.
[21]
A return to order
[
edit
]
Fortunes Well, Portland
watercolour, 1921
The Cattewater, Plymouth Sound
, tempora on board, 1923
Lewis unsuccessfully tried to revive his 'rebel artists' in 1920 with a
Group X
exhibition.
[22]
However, the pen and ink drawings of industrial landscapes that Wadsworth exhibited there were developed by him into a one-man show
The Black Country
that was also linked to a publication.
[23]
In January 1921 Wadsworth's father died, leaving him almost a quarter of a million pounds.
[24]
Wadsworth and Fanny holidayed in
Newlyn
,
Cornwall
and walked the south coast via
Devon
and
Dorset
. He returned to
Portland
the following year and painted watercolour studies and experimented with
tempera
? a medium associated with the work of early Renaissance artists. Tempera would be Wadsworth's choice of medium throughout the rest of his life. Wadsworth had two children ? Barbara and Anne. Tragically, Anne died of
nephritis
in March 1922.
[25]
A series of landscape pictures depicting strikingly calm coastal towns and ports in Britain and France using tempera was seen as Wadsworth adopting a more 'naturalistic' mode but it is perhaps fairer to say they marked a return to more representational picture making ? a position adopted by other
avant-garde
painters, such as
Picasso
,
Braque
and
Derain
, in the immediate post-war years and referred to as a 'return to order'.
[26]
Wadsworth's first exhibition of tempera paintings was held at the
Leicester Galleries
in 1923 ?
The Times
felt they possessed 'an austere and unsentimental beauty'
[27]
'A leading British modernist'
[
edit
]
North Sea
, 1928
In the second half of the 1920s Wadsworth concentrated on marine themed still life compositions. Perhaps following ideas articulated by
Leger
[28]
and to some extent exemplified in the work of the German
Neue Sachlichkeit
painters, Wadsworth juxtaposed modern manufactured objects such as marine navigational equipment with symbols of culture, contrasting the organic ? such as sea shells ? with the manufactured and using dramatic perspective effects to contrast the small with the vast. His use of tempora created a kind of realism that seemed ultramodern whilst also harking back to the past.
By the end of the 1920s Wadsworth was successfully exhibiting in Paris and London. His work was reproduced in European avant-garde arts magazines
[29]
and he could be seen as 'a leading British modernist artist'.
[30]
Spirit of the Thirties
[
edit
]
Composition, Crank and Chain
, 1932
In 1927 the family moved to 'Dairy House' in Maresfield,
East Sussex
. After substantial modernisation of the house and gardens, Edward and Fanny Wadsworth hosted regular weekend gatherings, picnics and garden parties throughout the next decade. Guests included avant-garde artists such as Paul Nash,
Max Ernst
,
Pierre Roy
,
Laszlo Moholy-Nagy
,
Roland Penrose
,
Lee Miller
and
Henry Moore
alongside art critics, actors, musicians, opera singers and dancers.
[31]
Wadsworth was a founder member of two radical pro-abstract movements in the early 1930s. Paul Nash's
Unit One
was ‘an expression of a truly contemporary spirit’
[32]
and Wadsworth exhibited with them at the Mayor Gallery,
London
alongside Nash, Moore,
Barbara Hepworth
,
Ben Nicholson
and
Edward Burra
.
[33]
He also exhibited with the
Abstraction-Creation
group in Paris.
[34]
Wadsworth outlined his approach to 'abstract art' in an insightful article published in
The Studio
magazine in 1933.
[35]
The mid-1930s saw two commissions that placed Wadsworth at the forefront of
art deco
design ? the tea room of the
De La Warr Pavilion
at Brexhill-on-Sea and two huge paintings for the Cunard Line's
RMS Queen Mary
. Wadsworth felt that the outcome of the Cunard Line commission was too compromised through the requirements for recognisable nautical subjects.
[36]
Later life
[
edit
]
Requiescat
, 1940
Triangles
, 1948
As the Second World War started Wadsworth was disappointed not to be appointed as a war artist by the
War Artists' Advisory Committee
and he and his wife, daughter and her two sons had to leave Dairy House as it was in an area cleared of civilians by the army. The Wadsworths moved to
Buxton
in
Derbyshire
, where they stayed for five years. Concern about the war and Wadsworth's own circumstances seem to inform the melancholic mood created in the debris-strewn beach of
Requiescat
.
[37]
For the first time Wadsworth's finances were under pressure and this may have contributed to his decision to start exhibiting at the
Royal Academy
summer show. In April 1943 he was elected an Associate of the Royal Academy (ARA). Wadsworth had joined the Buxton
Home Guard
and after training he was promoted to sergeant. The family moved back to Maresfield in 1945 and Wadsworth painted a series of abstract images that incorporated flower imagery. Although very different to his Vorticist abstracts of 1914, his last paintings, such as
Triangles
in 1948, did represent a return to, or development of, pure abstract forms.
A leaking appendix had been misdiagnosed in 1940 and in June 1949 Wadsworth died from
peritonitis
after an operation.
[38]
Legacy
[
edit
]
Abstract with Rose, for F
1945
The
Tate
Gallery staged a memorial exhibition in 1951. Wadsworth's daughter, Barbara Wadsworth, wrote a biography
A Painter's Life, Edward Wadsworth
in 1989 that draws upon the family archive and in the same year Bradford Art Galleries held a major retrospective
A Genius of Industrial England. Edward Wadsworth 1889-1949
accompanied by a publication edited by Jeremy Lewison. In 2005 Jonathan Black published
Form, Feeling and Calculation
which includes the complete paintings and drawings of Wadsworth.
The dazzle ships project of the First World War continues to inspire. The graphic designer
Peter Saville
had seen Wadsworth's painting
Dazzle-ships in Drydock at Liverpool
and was struck by the image. After suggesting the idea and title to
Andy McCluskey
of
Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark
, Saville carried the theme over to the sleeve design of their album
Dazzle Ships
(1983). More recently
Dazzle ship (14?18 NOW)
is a contemporary art commission by the
Imperial War Museum
to commemorate the centenary of the outbreak of World War I in August 2014 and includes work by
Peter Blake
.
References
[
edit
]
- ^
The 1891 census on Ancestry.co.uk shows Fred and his son living at Highfield House, Westgate, Cleckheaton. There was a live-in nurse, a cook and a housemaid. Barbara Wadsworth, in her biography
A Painter's Life
(1989), gives her father's date of birth as 19 October 1889. This date is also used by Jonathan Black in
Form, Feeling and Calculation
(2005). However, John Rothenstein in
Modern English Painters Vol. 2
gives the date as 29 October 1889. It is this date that Richard Cork uses in
Vorticism and Its Allies
(1974)
- ^
Barbara Wadsworth
Edward Wadsworth. A Painter's Life.
(1989) Salisbury: Michael Russell, pages 4-11.
- ^
"Distinguished old Fettesians"
. Archived from
the original
on 22 November 2007
. Retrieved
24 February
2008
.
- ^
Barbara Wadsworth (1989) page 13
- ^
Barbara Wadsworth (1989), page 22
- ^
Barbara Wadsworth (1989) page p.23
- ^
Essay on Wadsworth, Richard Cork, Oxford Art Online
- ^
Richard Ingleby 'Utterly Tired of Chaos' in C.R.W.Nevinson,
The Twentieth Century
Merrell Holberton: London 1999, page 11
- ^
quoted by Ruth Artmonsky 'Slade Alumni 1900-1914', Artmonsky Arts (2001), p. 3
- ^
Ruth Artmonsky (2001) page 22
- ^
London, England, Church of England Marriages and Banns 1754-1938, ancestry.co.uk
- ^
The Wadsworth work was added to the exhibition for the last month of the exhibition only
- ^
Anna Gruetzer Robins
Modern Art in Britain 1910-1914
(1997) Merrell Holberton: London, p.89
- ^
Breaking The Rules, Bury, British Library, p112
- ^
BLAST
, Lewis et al., Bodley Head, 1914
- ^
Richard Cork
Vorticism and its Allies
Tate Gallery, 1974, pages 80-85, here Cork itemises those paintings that are only known through photographic reproduction
- ^
"Conscription: the First World War ?- UK Parliament"
.
- ^
UK Navy Lists 1888-1970 ancestry.co.uk
- ^
Jonathan Black,
Edward Wadsworth: Form Feeling and Calculation
(2005) pp. 29-33.
- ^
Maria Tippett,
Art at the Service of War: Canada, Art, and the Great War
.
- ^
In the early 1920s the whole collection was given to the
National Gallery of Canada
.
- ^
Heal's Mansard Gallery, London March-April 1920. Group X i.e. ten artists
- ^
An introduction to the book was by
Arnold Bennett
. Published in London, 1920
- ^
Yorkshire Post
22 June 1949, cited by Jonathan Black (2005) page 42
- ^
Jonathan Black (2005) page 50
- ^
"Return to order"
.
- ^
The Times
, 3 March 1923
- ^
Jonathan Black (2005) page 67
- ^
such as the Belgian magazine
Varietes
where his work appears alongside that of
Paul Klee
,
Giorgio de Chirico
,
Rene Magritte
,
Max Ernst
and
Pierre Roy
- ^
Jonathan Black (2005) page 70
- ^
Jonathan Black (2005) page 66
- ^
Paul Nash in letter to
The Times
June 1933
- ^
Unit One at the Mayor Gallery opened in April 1934
- ^
June 1931
- ^
Edward Wadsworth 'The Abstract Painter's Own Explanation'
The Studio
6 October 1933
- ^
Jonathan Black (2005) pages 96-104
- ^
Jonathan Black (2005) pages 115-116
- ^
Jonathan Black (2005) page 146
Further reading
[
edit
]
- Black, Jonathan (2005).
Edward Wadsworth. Form, feeling and calculation: the complete paintings and drawings
. London:
Philip Wilson Publishers
.
- Greenwood, Jeremy (2002).
The Graphic Work of Edward Wadsworth
. Wood Lea Press.
- "Edward Wadsworth", in
Behrens, Roy R.
, (2009).
Camoupedia: A Compendium of Research on Art, Architecture and Camouflage
. Bobolink Books
- LIT: Exhibition catalogue
(1990).
Camden Arts Centre
.
- Memorial Exhibition Catalogue (1951).
Tate Gallery
.
- Lewison, Jeremy (ed.) (1990).
A Genius of Industrial England; Edward Wadsworth 1889?1949
. The Arkwright Arts Trust.
- Wadsworth, Barbara (1989).
Edward Wadsworth. A Painter's Life
. Michael Russell Publishing.
- Wadsworth, Edward (1933). "The Abstract Painter's Own Explanation" in
The Studio
, 6 October 1933. Reprinted in Glazenbook, Mark.
Unit One: Spirit of the 30's
exhibition catalogue,
Mayor Gallery
, London, May-June 1984.
External links
[
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]
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