West Sussex Gazette

Highlighti­ng the work of the important English artist and modernist Paul Nash

- Rupert Toovey is a senior director of Toovey’s, the leading fine art auction house in West Sussex, based on the A24 at Washington – tooveys. com – and a priest in the Church of England Diocese of Chichester BY RUPERT TOOVEY | visit www.tooveys.com

Private Press books published in the 20th century were often illustrate­d by leading British artists. Many of these are printed in signed limited editions like the volume Genesis illustrate­d by Paul Nash.

In the 20th century many artists rediscover­ed their role as artisan artists and designers, as well as painters and sculptors of fine art.

One of the ways that they this expressed this was through making printed woodblock illustrati­ons for fine books produced by Private Presses.

Paul Nash is often thought of as an essentiall­y English artist but between the wars he also sought to champion the hope embodied in continenta­l modernism defending Picasso and experiment­ing with abstractio­n before embracing Surrealism and founding Unit One with Ben Nicholson, Henry Moore, Barbara Hepworth and Ivon Hitchens.

He served as a soldier in the trenches of the Great

War and became an important war artist on the Western Front between 1917 and 1918 and again during the Second World War.

In 1920, the Society of Wood Engravers was formed and Nash joined.

The twelve stark monochroma­tic illustrati­ons for

Genesis illustrate­s Nash’s move towards modernism and semi-abstractio­n for a period.

The influences of Vorticism and Cubism are apparent in the dynamic sense of movement and the fragmented space he creates in these images.

The figures have an ethereal quality.

This technique, combined with his unerring and poetic eye, seeds drama in our imaginatio­ns and allows us to glimpse something beyond our immediate perception of the world.

Genesis was produced for the Nonsuch Press by the Curwen Press in 1924 in a limited edition of 375 copies.

The dramatic text is in Rudolf Koch’s Neuland type.

This copy lacked its orange, paper dust jacket and despite some issues of condition it realised £800 in a Toovey’s specialist book sale.

Paul Nash exhibited at the important ‘Exhibition of the Work of English Postimpres­sionists, Cubists and Others’, where his work

was selected by Spencer Gore of the Camden Town Group.

The exhibition was held at the Public Art Galleries in Brighton between 16th December 1913 and 14th January 1914.

Nash also taught and championed two other artists noted in Sussex, Eric Ravilious and Edward Bawden, at the Royal College of Art in London.

I have long been of the opinion that Sussex stands out as an important centre for Modern British Artists working in the 20th century.

Paul Nash’s original and influentia­l work, and his connection with Sussex, makes him a favourite of mine.

 ?? ?? Genesis with Twelve Woodcuts by Paul Nash, circa 1924.
Genesis with Twelve Woodcuts by Paul Nash, circa 1924.
 ?? ?? An illustrati­on from Genesis by Paul Nash - ‘Let us make man in our image’.
An illustrati­on from Genesis by Paul Nash - ‘Let us make man in our image’.
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