Thursday, February 1, 2018

British Art made in the Nineteen Twenties (Tate)

Philip Wilson Steer
Elm Trees
1922
watercolor
Tate Gallery

from The Evening Land

I am so terrified, America,
Of the solid click of your human contact;
And after this
The winding-sheet of your selfless ideal love –
Boundless love,
Like a poison gas.

Does no one realize that love should be intense,
Not boundless?
This boundless love is like the bad smell
Of something gone wrong in the middle –
All this philanthropy and benevolence on other people's behalf
Just a bad smell.

– D.H. Lawrence (1922)

Stanley Spencer
The Robing of Christ
1922
oil on panel
Tate Gallery

Stanley Spencer
The Disrobing of Christ
1922
oil on panel
Tate Gallery

Stanley Spencer
The Roundabout
1923
oil on canvas
Tate Gallery

Stanley Spencer
Turkeys
1925
oil on canvas
Tate Gallery

Charles Ginner
Porthleven
1922
oil on canvas
Tate Gallery

Portrait of a Man

"I did it, yes," he said;
And looked at me
When I asked him
If the things they said of him were true –
His neighbors gabbling amongst themselves.

He looked at me:
His eyes were clear as water,
And there shone
A mystical elation on his face:
"I did it, yes,"
Was all he said.

– Robert Roe (1922)

John Lavery
The Golf Course, North Berwick
1922
oil on canvas
Tate Gallery

John Lavery
The Jockeys' Dressing Room at Ascot
1923
oil on canvas
Tate Gallery

Ben Nicholson
1924 (first abstract painting, Chelsea)
ca. 1923-24
oil on canvas
Tate Gallery

Henry Moore
Seated Nude with Mirror
1924
drawing
Tate Gallery

Henry Moore
Standing Nude
ca. 1925
drawing
Tate Gallery

The Dancer

He leaps upon the stage like a flash of fire,
    His head glittering with gold plumes that restlessly sway.
Half a turn, and he waves his arm,
    Like a willow-branch asleep in a spring wind.
A leap like a shaft of forked lightning –
    His shoulders shine smooth before the footlights.
He turns rapidly upon five crimson toes – suddenly stops,
    Quivers, to contemplate the high note of a violin.
Dreamily he half closes his shadowed eyes –
    Turns, and is gone.

– Mary Edgar Comstock (1925)

William Roberts
Deposition from the Cross
ca. 1926
oil on canvas
Tate Gallery

Ivon Hitchens
Balcony at Cambridge
1929
oil on canvas
Tate Gallery

Francis Bacon
Gouache
1929
gouache and watercolor on paper
Tate Gallery
(long term loan from private collection)

The Charm

Let  there  be  words  spoken;  let  there  be  a  charm  cast.
White pigeons flying in the early morning.  (It is begun.
Eleven  words  start  the  charm, one  at  the  last.) –
White  wings  trailing crimson in the evening sun.
Twisted smile, laughing tears. None must know
The charm's meaning.  Drop them slow
In the witch's hissing cauldron!
Words shall be spoken
And be broken
One by 
One.

                                                                                      – Jewell Bothwell Tull (1929)

Poems from the archives of Poetry (Chicago)