Trevelyan, Julian: Westminster
£1,100.00
A creative, dynamic and original etching and aquatint printed in colours on wove paper from Julian Trevelyan’s ‘Thames Suite’ (1969-70). The print is unframed in excellent condition, signed in pencil, inscribed and numbered from the limited edition of 75. The edition number may vary from that shown in the illustration but can be confirmed on purchase.
More images can be provided on request.
Artist: Julian Trevelyan, (1910-1988)
Title and date: Westminster, 1969-70
Size: 35.0 x 47.8 cms.
Description
Artist description:
Julian Trevelyan was a distinguished artist and printmaker producing work with a broad appeal. He had no formal art training but joined Stanley Hayter’s atelier in Paris in 1931 working alongside such artists as Ernst, Kokoschka, Masson, Miro and Picasso. It was in this atmosphere that he turned to Surrealism and became a founding member of the British Surrealist Group. A selection of his paintings and etchings featured in the ground-breaking ‘International Surrealist Exhibition’ at the New Burlington Galleries, London in 1936, his first solo exhibition was held at the Lefevre Gallery 1937.
He served as a Camouflage Officer in the Royal Engineers from 1940–43 and visited Africa and Palestine. He joined the London Group in 1948 and became its Vice-President in 1956. He taught at the Chelsea School of Art from 1949 and at the Royal College of Art from 1955, his students included David Hockney, Ron Kitaj and Norman Ackroyd. He was both a highly influential teacher and an important innovator of modern print techniques, especially in etching.
In1951, he married Mary Fedden, a fellow painter from whom he became inseparable. Both artists painted a series of murals for the Festival of Britain (1951) and they travelled widely in Europe, Africa and the USA. They lived together at Durham Wharf on the banks of the River Thames – a location which became central to both of their work.
An exhibition at the Bohun Gallery was the catalyst for a series of major exhibitions and publications, and culminated in a nationwide touring exhibition of paintings which opened at the Royal College of Art in October 1998 and showed concurrently with an exhibition of his etchings at the River and Rowing Museum, Henley-on-Thames. These major shows were the launch for ‘Julian Trevelyan: Catalogue Raisonne of Prints’ by Sylvie Turner and published by Lund Humphries.