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Painting

1928 (Banks Head - Cumbrian Landscape)

Ben Nicholson
Oil on canvas
453 x 556 mm
[BN 14]
On display

About the artist

Born 1894 – Died 1982

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This painting is one of the most remarkable examples of Ben Nicholson’s exploration of a consciously ‘naïve’ style. In the early years of his career Nicholson sought to move beyond the example of his father William, a glossy Edwardian still life and portrait painter. He wrote of wanting to “bust up all the sophistication around me” and sought inspiration in the work of artists as diverse as Cézanne, the Cubists and 15th century Italian painters.

One of the key moments in Nicholson’s artistic development was the encounter, during the summer of 1928, with Alfred Wallis, a 73-year-old Cornish fisherman who a few years earlier had taken up painting as a hobby. Nicholson found in Wallis’s art an example of the freedom of technique and vision and a disregard of the rigid rules of academic painting that he himself was longing for.

Wallis remained a source of inspiration for Nicholson for some time after their encounter. However, the speed of work, rough surface texture, distortion of perspective and scale, sketchy details and limited range of colours which characterise Wallis’s art appear in Nicholson’s paintings that predate the summer of 1928, as demonstrated by this landscape. Such characters, in fact, accorded not only with Ben’s practice but also with that of his wife Winifred and of Christopher Wood, two of his regular painting companions at that time. Examples at Kettle’s Yard are Winifred’s Roman Road (Landscape with Two Houses) (1926) and Wood’s Landscape at Vence (1927).

Banks Head – Cumbrian Landscape was painted in the spring of 1928. It shows a site close to Ben and Winifred’s farm at Banks Head, which they had bought four years earlier. The exact location, however, has not been positively identified. Their son Jake later recalled that “in the early days at Banks Head, Ben and Winifred would carry their paints, canvases and drawing materials to a chosen painting site. As these were heavy, the distances were limited, so it was mostly the nearby farms which they painted.”

Jim and Helen Ede received the painting as a gift from Nicholson in 1930. Helen was particularly enchanted by it. This accounts for its positioning in her sitting room.

Provenance: gift of the artist to H.S. (Jim) Ede, 1930

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