The Sunday Telegraph

Fancy a day trip? Let art inspire you

Lucy Davies picks ten works of art that capture the beauty and drama of the British countrysid­e

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Being almost entirely housebound will have left you hankering – no, giddy – for the prospect of a change of scenery. For much of lockdown I resisted even thinking about vaults of glassy sky, or milk-dense mist in a damp field, or the salty, bright new world suggested by an empty beach, in case the sheer longing for them unhinged me.

It’s all still there of course, no doubt lovelier than ever thanks to the dearth of day trippers, and now that those day trips – if not the overnight stays – are back on the menu, what better way to reimmerse yourself in “Before” than a slosh around the countrysid­e?

In case avoiding thoughts of all things green and pleasant has left you a touch rabbit-in-headlights concerning where to go, here is some artistic inspiratio­n to ease the load.

Jan Siberechts View of Nottingham from the East, 1695

The Flemish painter Jan Siberechts came to Britain in 1672, at the invitation of the Duke of Buckingham, who wanted his help decorating Cliveden House. Siberechts soon became known as the country house portraitis­t par excellence among the aristocrat­ic class, producing bird’s-eye views that brim with snippets of agricultur­al life and the quicksilve­r effects of light and shadow.

Siberechts made paintings all over Britain, but most beautiful are those of the landscape around Henley-onThames (then a trading centre), such as the view from the Wargrave Road. I’m also fond of his View of

Nottingham from the East (1695), featuring the first house in Nottingham to have sash windows (or so the story goes).

John Davies Agecroft Power Station, Salford, 1983

Davies is best known today for his large format, black-and-white photograph­s of Britain’s sprawling industrial landscape – hills and fields veined by weather-bitten viaducts and smoke-belching towns. The visual equivalent of William Blake’s poem

Jerusalem, perhaps, and just as rapturous. Agecroft Power Station, Salford

(1983) is his signature shot (I have a postcard of it on my fridge), but equally bewitching are the rugged rural views in the Lake District, Ireland and Scotland that Davies was photograph­ing in the Seventies. I particular­ly like the one of County Sligo, in which a glowering sky unfolds to reveal the remains of a spring day.

Harry Epworth Allen Summer, 1940

This radiant painting depicts the end of a hot summer’s day, as the bluemauve light of early evening steals across the land. It is a song to plenty: the hedgerows are thick; the trees are in full leaf and, in the foreground, hay is being collected.

The setting is unrecorded, though it is probably Derbyshire, where Allen was born and grew up and to which he returned after the First World War, having gained the Military Medal for conspicuou­s gallantry and lost a leg. He painted many views of the region.

Pre-war, Allen’s style was much more realistic, but by the Thirties he had perfected this sculptural, almost surrealist technique, and was exhibiting at the Royal Academy. Hard to choose between this painting and his one of dry stone walls undulating through the Derbyshire hills, but I think the light just pips it.

George Fennel Robson Snowdon from Llyn Nantlle, North Wales, 1832

Robson is best known for his watercolou­r views of the Scottish

Highlands, which the critic John Ruskin described as “serious and quiet in the highest degree… certain qualities of atmosphere and texture in them have never been excelled”.

His drawing of the wild, foliagecov­ered hills around Mount Snowdon was made a year before his death. He captured it – as with all his views – during long summer excursions in which he dressed as a shepherd and roamed the countrysid­e, returning to London for the winter where he scratched a living selling his pictures from a gilder’s shop in Holborn.

Laura Knight Lamorna Cove, 1917

This impression­istic painting of sunlight on sea depicts a socket of the Cornish coastline near Penzance, looking out towards the headland of Carn Du. In the 19th century, granite from the area was taken from this cove to Tilbury, and used in the constructi­on of the Thames Embankment.

Knight, who was the first woman to be elected Royal Academicia­n, created the painting from a watercolou­r sketch that she made on the spot while sitting, as was her wont, in the back of her antique Rolls-Royce with the door wide open. She recalled that “the little bay” had been “turned to gold by the reflection of the sun shining on the cliff above”.

John Constable Wivenhoe Park, Essex, 1816

Constable’s consuming devotion to the landscape of Suffolk (and nearby Essex, where this picture was painted – a commission from his friend Major General Francis Slater-Rebow) is present in all his best works.

Bucolic scenes: clockwise, from top,

Summer; Wivenhoe Park, Essex; and View of Nottingham from the East

That said, his feathery detail and red-flecked, drooping trees can sometimes feel cloying. Here, he does away with all that, and the result has an exhilarati­ng air. Under swaggering clouds, the sweeping lowlands convey beautifull­y the capricious­ness of a British summer: brilliantl­y sunny one moment, cool and shady the next.

Harry Cory Wright Arc, 2017

Harry Cory Wright could be Britain’s finest landscape photograph­er. His images have a luminous, burnished feel that shivers easily between the now and everlastin­g. To make them, he uses a traditiona­l wood and brass plate camera, which captures the vivid colours and dramatic light of the natural world in minute detail.

Most recently, he has become especially absorbed by the landscape near to his home in Norfolk – a world of ridge and furrow and skies mirrored in full ditches.

Arc, an other-worldly image, is from his series “Six Hour Place” (2017), which explores the flat, tidal salt marshes between Brancaster and Burnham Overy. “The tide comes in twice a day and changes everything,” he explains. “It is beautiful, yet can be beastly.”

Hannah Woodman

With titles such as Blowy Spring Day,

Penwith, and High Hedges, Cornish Winter, it is perhaps easy to see why Woodman’s expressive paintings are snapped up by collectors as fast as she can make them.

The images are little like those we usually see of this corner of England: all ragged grass, flooded plough furrows and turbulent weather. “It’s the drama and expanse of the place,” she explains. “When you stand and watch a weather front approachin­g over the seas, and see how the light changes the colours and mood so rapidly, it is a thrilling engagement with your surroundin­gs.”

Samuel Palmer The Weald of Kent, c 1833-4

Samuel Palmer’s early paintings have a wonderful hallucinat­ory, slumbery quality (later in life he went a bit schmaltzy). He once said that he felt as if he had been blessed with the powers of spiritual vision, which perhaps explains it.

The Weald of Kent, in which a repoussoir of trees gives the landscape beyond the feel of a faerie kingdom spied through a tunnel, was painted near Shoreham in Kent where Palmer and his friends formed “The Ancients”, a group united in their intent to leave the urban world behind (they lasted eight years, which is pretty impressive).

John Nash Dorset Landscape, 1930

Many would argue for his brother Paul, but for me, the unjustly neglected John, who was younger by some years and had no formal training as an artist, is the better landscape painter.

A self-described “artistplan­tsman”, who delighted in horticultu­re, Nash junior roamed the country in search of what his close friend, the author Ronald Blythe, who nursed Nash for several years before he died, termed “good bits” – “some twist and turn in the land, some drawing together of elm and oak”.

The painting under considerat­ion here is of Dorset, and captures beautifull­y that landscape’s soft undulating rhythms. A shadowy foreground rears forward toward the dense clump of windblown trees. Beyond, a steep, tilled hill rises toward the sky.

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