Ben Nicholson 1894 -1982
Ben Nicholson (1894 - 1984) was born in Denham, Buckinghamshire, son of the artists William Nicholson and Mabel Pryde. He studied at the Slade School of Art, 1910-11. He spent 1912 to 1914 in France and Italy, and was in the United States in 1917-18. He married the artist Winifred Roberts in 1920. Over the next three years they spent winters in Lugano, Switzerland, then divided their time between London and Cumberland. In 1931, Nicholson's relationship with the sculptor, Barbara Hepworth, resulted in the breakdown of his marriage to Winifred. He and Hepworth married in 1938 and divorced in 1951. Nicholson lived in London from 1932 to 1939, making several trips to Paris in 1932-3, visiting the studios of Picasso, Braque, Arp, Brancusi and Mondrian. From 1939 to 1958 he lived and worked in Cornwall, before moving to Switzerland. He returned to London in 1974.
Nicholson's earliest paintings were still lifes influenced by those of his father. In the 1920s he began painting figurative and abstract works inspired by Post Impressionism and Cubism. He produced his first geometric and abstract reliefs in 1933. He first exhibited in 1919, at the Grosvenor Gallery and Grafton Galleries. His first one-man show was held at the Twenty-one Gallery, London in 1924. From 1924 to 1935 he was a member of the Seven and Five Society, and in 1933 he joined Unit One, founded by Paul Nash. In 1937 Nicholson, Naum Gabo and the architect Leslie Martin edited Circle: International Survey of Constructive Art. Circle identified Nicholson with a group of like-minded artists and architects who wanted to apply 'constructivist' principles to public and private art, advocating mathematical precision, clean lines and an absence of ornament.
In 1952 Nicholson won first prize at the Carnegie International, Pittsburgh. He was awarded the first Guggenheim International painting prize in 1956, and the international prize for painting at the Sao Paulo Bienal in 1957. He received the Order of Merit in 1968. Numerous retrospective exhibitions of his work have been held, including shows at the Venice Biennale and Tate Gallery in 1954-5, Kunsthalle, Berne in 1961, Museum of Fine Arts, Dallas in 1964, Albright-Knox Art Gallery, Buffalo in 1978, and Tate Gallery in 1993-4. Helped by wide international exposure in British Council tours during the 1940s and 1950s and by the championing of the writer Herbert Read, Nicholson's work came to be seen, with Henry Moore's, as the quintessence of British Modernism.
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Ben NicholsonStill Life, 1971lithograph47.5 x 66cmsigned verso
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Ben NicholsonPalaestra with Moon, 1967etching, cancelled with crayon with cancelled etching plate34.4 x 48.5cm
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Ben NicholsonTurkish Sundial and Tree, 1967etching31.8 x 22.6cmunsigned
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Ben NicholsonTurkish Sundial Between Two Turkish Forms, 1967etching
artist's proof aside from an edition of 5025.3 x 33.5cm -
Ben NicholsonTurkish Sundial, Column and Tree , 1967etching31.6 x 26.5 (plate)
43.5 x 37.7cm (sheet)unsigned -
Ben NicholsonFragment of Tuscan Cathedral, 1966etching20.2 x 15cmedition of 380unsigned
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Ben NicholsonAegean, 1965-70pen and ink over etching32 x 41.5cmsigned
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Ben NicholsonOlympic Fragment, 1965etching20.1 x 24.6cm (plate)
32.2 x 37.9cm (paper)signed -
Ben NicholsonVertical, 1937Jacquard woven rayon & cotton
Edinburgh Weavers70.5 x 120cm
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MODERN MASTERS
Henry Moore | Ben Nicholson | Peter Blake | George Dannatt | Raoul Dufy 5 - 30 Aug 2022 -
Impressions on Paper
4 Feb - 1 Mar 2022This is the gallery's eighth annual exhibition dedicated entirely to works of art on paper through painting, etching, engraving, woodcut and linocut prints. In anticipation of a major exhibition of...Read more