Clare Leighton's Rural Life
By (Author) Clare Leighton
Edited by David Leighton
Bodleian Library
Bodleian Library
1st October 2023
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Sociology and anthropology
761.2092
Hardback
192
Width 190mm, Height 242mm
758g
A stunningly packaged anthology of writings and artwork by noted wood engraver Clare Leighton.
Clare Leighton was one of the most prolific and highly regarded wood engravers of her time, leaving behind a body of work that reflected her rural life in Britain and North America.
During the 1930s, as the world around her became increasingly technological, industrial, and urban, Leighton portrayed rural men and women and the ancient methods they used to work the land that would soon vanish forever. Her two best-loved publications, The Farmers Year and Four Hedges, reflect this passion for the British countryside. Less well known are her books illustrating and describing rural life in the United States of America, where she emigrated and became a naturalised citizen in 1945, including Southern Harvest and Where Land Meets Sea: The Tide Line of Cape Cod.
Leighton also spent time in Canada with the logging community, winning the respect of Canadian lumberjacks by adopting their way of life. Her wood engravings depicting lumberjacks in the snow-covered forests of Canada are some of her most evocative prints.
This lavish anthology includes beautifully reproduced extracts and a detailed introduction to the artists life and work, reflecting Leightons lifelong fascination with the virtues of the countryside and the people who worked the land.
Clare Leighton (18981989) was a renowned artist, writer, and wood engraver. David Leighton was the editor of Clare Leighton: The Growth and Shaping of an Artist- writer. He was Clare Leightons nephew.