Edward Bawden
By (Author) James Russell
Philip Wilson Publishers Ltd
Philip Wilson Publishers Ltd
1st August 2018
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Individual artists, art monographs
Paintings and painting in watercolours or pastels
Prints and printmaking
759.2
176
Width 240mm, Height 278mm, Spine 20mm
1000g
This comprehensive survey of the career of Edward Bawden brings together his most significant work in watercolour, printmaking, design and illustration.
A sequel to the author's previous title on Ravilious, this volume surveys the life and work of fellow artist Edward Bawden (1903-1989), another popular exponent of the modern British tradition. The book explores in depth the most significant creative periods of Bawden's life and is fully illustrated throughout.
Bawden began his career in the 1920s as a precociously talented designer and illustrator. He successfully reinvented himself time and again as the decades passed while always retaining a distinctive freshness, humour and humanity in his work.
The book accompanied a major exhibition at Dulwich Picture Gallery.
"Edward Bawden is breaking out all over the country this summer. Dulwich Picture Gallery and the Fry Art Gallery in Saffron Walden, Essex, have major surveys of his work, each with an accompanying book."
-- (07/02/2018)"Sumptuous."
--Clare Walters, Eye Magazine (07/02/2018)James Russell studied History at Pembroke College, Cambridge. A passionate advocate of twentieth-century British painting and design, he writes and lectures widely. He is the author of The Lost Watercolours of Edward Bawden as well as titles devoted to Eric Ravilious (Philip Wilson Publishers), Edward Seago, Peggy Angus and Paul Nash. As curator, his previous exhibitions include Ravilious (Dulwich Picture Gallery, 2015); Peggy Angus: Designer, Teacher, Painter (Towner, Eastbourne, 2014) and Century, a wide-ranging survey of 20th century British art (The Jerwood Gallery, Hastings, 2016).