Sutherland (Graham Vivian)

Cray Fields,

£3,750


, Twenty-One Gallery, 1925.
Graham Sutherland (1903-1980) studied etching under Frederick Griggs, working in an accomplished style in the pastoral tradition of William Blake and Samuel Palmer. This formed the basis of his early commercial success in the 1920s, selling to both British and American buyers. This plate from 1925, the year of Sutherland’s first exhibition at the Twenty-One Gallery, particularly conveys the religious, visionary air of his early work, incorporating both a guiding star and the rising sun. The Wall Street Crash of 1929 significantly disrupted the market, and cast a long shadow over the world. Sutherland’s subsequent style took on a darker, more brooding air, and echoes of the more surreal forms of De Chirico and Nash that paved the way for his later work.

Provenance: ex-collection of Mattei Radev (1927-2009), inherited from Eardley Knollys (1902-1991), artist, critic, and art dealer, member of the Bloomsbury Group, who purchased it Colnaghi, March, 1970, who had just acquired it from Sotheby’s, February, 1970..
172 by 145mm (6¾ by 5¾ inches).