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Thomas Hennell: The Land and the Mind

(Hardback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Thomas Hennell: The Land and the Mind

Contributors:

By (Author) Jessica Kilburn

ISBN:

9781910258620

Publisher:

Pimpernel Press Ltd

Imprint:

Pimpernel Press Ltd

Publication Date:

4th March 2021

UK Publication Date:

4th March 2021

Country:

United Kingdom

Classifications

Readership:

General

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Dewey:

759.2

Prizes:

Long-listed for William MB Berger Prize for British Art History 2022

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

352

Dimensions:

Width 230mm, Height 287mm

Description

When John Rothenstein, Director of the Tate Gallery, published the third volume of his Modern English Painters in 1984, he subtitled it Hennell to Hockney. While - now as then - David Hockney needs no introduction, Thomas Hennell (1903-1945) has somehow slipped off the radar and undoubtedly deserves to be more widely recognized today. In his lifetime, Hennell was highly regarded as an artist and author. His main theme was the English countryside. His distinctive beautifully coloured watercolours and detailed drawings were made with a strong sense of vocation. He struggled with serious mental illness, was diagnosed as schizophrenic and spent the years from 1932 to 1935 in the Maudsley mental hospital in London. Edward Bawden encouraged him to 'centre and compose' the experience of schizophrenia by writing about it, and Hennell's remarkable illustrated account, The Witness, was published in 1938. Eric Ravilious, too, helped Hennell with his recovery, providing a series of wood engravings as illustrations for The Poems of Thomas Hennell, published in 1936. At the outbreak of war in 1939 Hennell wrote to War Artists' Advisory Committee, offering his services as an artist. From 1943 he was a full-time salaried war artist. He served in Europe and the Far East and was in Java when he was captured by Indonesian nationalist fighters in November 1945. He was presumed to have been killed shortly after. At the time of his death, Hennell was widely considered to be one of Britain's most significant watercolourists and notable cultural figures. Kenneth Clark rated Hennell's work highly enough to place his work prominently in a display of National War Pictures at the National Gallery in 1945. Hennell's paintings and drawings provide an insight into an era: they will appeal to those with a love of the countryside and farming, an interest in the Second World War, and admirers of the now very famous artists who were his friends and regarded him as an equal.

Reviews

"This well-written, intricately researched and hugely detailed account of his life and work . . .generously illustrated, and with informative picture captions, has a relaxed breadth which suits the subject . . . It is indisputable that Hennell was an artist and writer of distinctive achievement, whose work should be more widely known. This substantial and impressive book deserves to lead the way in a Hennell revival."

-- Andrew Lambirth * The Spectator *

"Truly a delight, beautifullywritten, with superb illustrations."

-- Jenny Uglow

"The first full biography of the artist in over 30 years...richly illustrated...a full account of his fascinating life and work."

* The Chap *

"Magnificent...this book glows with colour on almost every page....a sympathetic and nuanced biography which will do a great deal to broaden Hennell's appeal and ensure that his claims to the pinnacle of watercolour excellence can no longer be ignored."

* The Burlington Magazine *

"Superbly researched and illustrated...a thoughtful account of a remarkable life."

* Times Literary Supplement *

"A timely reminder of an artist well worth discovering."

* Illustration magazine *

"Hennell's superb watercolours and drawings capture English agricultural life in the 1930s and 40s, on the cusp of changing for ever, and Kilburn's very welcome and lavishly illustrated biography is appropriately elegiac."

-- Peter Parker * Times Literary Supplement Books of the Year *

Author Bio

Jessica Kilburn is a writer and researcher from Northumberland. She read English at Merton College, Oxford, followed by History of Art at the University of Glasgow. She contributed articles to theOxford Dictionary of National Biography, has written forIllustrationmagazine and curated an exhibition about Lancelot 'Capability' Brown at his birthplace in Northumberland.

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