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limited edition hand-embossed & numbered prints

Bawden, Edward – Larchwood

£175.00£285.00

Product Code: 9cdf7a13e972-larchwood

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Description

A path through a larch wood towards an occluded destination. This is an early painting by Bawden, and experimental: larch trees are conifers, with spiky needles. And when they grow in serrated rows, bunched up together, they can form shapes which look like tweed woven in a herringbone pattern. In order to achieve this Bawden has scraped the surface of the paper, so that the paper both depicts and contains the marks he makes.

FramingYour print is bespoke framed using pH neutral materials and conservation-grade mounts.
PostageUK postage free of charge. International postage is calculated at checkout.
FormatGiclée Print, Limited Edition (1/950) on 310gsm thick, 100% cotton rag. Hand-numbered and hand-embossed.
SizeImage:47.0 x 59.0; paper:58.0 x 69.0cm
Edward Bawden

About This Artist

Edward Bawden CBE RA

Edward Bawden [1903-89] studied at the Cambridge School of Art and at the Royal College of Art. He belonged to that circle of friends which included Eric Ravilious, Douglas Bliss and Enid Marx – a group tutored by Paul Nash and famously described by him as representing ‘an outbreak of talent’.
Bawden taught at Goldsmith’s College and the Royal College of Art; at the same time he worked as a graphic designer and illustrator providing posters for London Transport, designs for the Poole Potteries and Curwen Press, and book illustrations for Faber and Faber. During the Second World War Bawden was nominated Official War Artist; he produced mostly watercolours, at this point, and worked both in France and the Middle East.

During the late 1950’s and the 1960’s Bawden produced the linocut and lithographs for which he is perhaps best known. He produced large prints on Kew Gardens and Brighton; on Liverpool Street Station and a series on the London Markets. Clear and bold and often graphic in design – reflective no doubt of his training in the Design School of the Royal College – they are representative of lino-cutting at its best. They also push the creative possibilities of the medium as in, for instance, the angular cuts in Snowstorm at Brighton which make abstract the portrayal of a storm whilst at the same time graphically capturing its impact.

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