An extensively illustrated portrait of one of the leading English artists of the inter-war period, who produced a major body of work in a variety of media.
Trade Information: LGEN
Available as: Paperback, ePub, Kindle, PDF
ISBN: 9780718829209
Specifications: 256x189mm, 144pp, colour and b&w illustrations
Published: September 2016
ISBN: 9780718844899
Specifications: colour and b&w illustrations
Published: September 2016
ISBN: 9780718844882
Specifications: 145pp, colour and b&w illustrations
Published: September 2016
Eric Ravilious was among the foremost of English artists to emerge between the wars – and one of the great original wood engravers. His body of work was wide-ranging and multi-faceted; in his relatively short career after he left the Royal College of Art he produced an extraordinary amount of work – murals, watercolours, wood engravings, lithographs and pottery designs for Wedgwood.
As successful and enterprising as he was in these diverse fields, it was in the field of landscape painting in watercolour that Ravilious excelled. His tragic and untimely death in 1942, while on service as an Official War Artist, meant that his great promise was never fulfilled and it has been left to Helen Binyon to present this fascinating study of the artist to a world largely unaware of his presence. The author knew Ravilious well from their student days and has been able to draw upon her intimate knowledge of this vivid and exciting artist to make this a compelling account of a genius.
Memoir of an Artist is introduced by Richard Morphet, Deputy Keeper of Modern Art at the Tate Gallery, who places Ravilious in the context of modern-day appreciation of his work and describes the close relationship between Eric Ravilious and Helen Binyon, which led her to write this illuminating book, now reprinted by The Lutterworth Press in paperback.
The book is lavishly illustrated with examples of Ravilious's work from his student days to his powerfully realised drawings and paintings as an Official War Artist.
This book will surely afford widespread pleasure: Eric Ravilious remains one of the most ardently admired members of a generation marked by outstanding talent, and Helen Binyon, a fellow student and intimate friend until the end of his life, was by far the best qualified to write it. From the Foreword by Sir John Rothenstein
Foreword by Sir John Rothenstein
Preface
Eric Ravilious and Helen Binyon by Richard Morphet
Chapters One to Ten
Chronology
Exhibitions
Bibliography
Index
Helen Binyon was born in 1904, and studied at the Royal College of Art, where she first met Eric Ravilious. A talented graphic artist in her own right, especially in the areas of engraving and watercolour, she taught at the Bath Academy of Art, where she became a major proponent of puppetry as an art form, a passion which she continued after her retirement in 1965. She died in 1979.