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24 September 2014
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Picture of Britain
Richard Wilson's Cader Idris copyright Tate, London 2005

Tate Britain Room Summary:

The Mystical West



Since the eighteenth century, many artists have travelled to the West of England and to Wales to find a world of myths and megaliths redolent of an ancient Celtic past.

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This section covers an area ranging from Stonehenge, depicted in Henry Mark Anthony's huge painting, to North Wales, from the Wye Valley to Cornwall.

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Among the highlights are works by the classical Richard Wilson and the late romantic Clarence Whaite, who discovered a druidical world of myth and folklore in Snowdonia.

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In the twentieth century, artists such as Graham Sutherland and David Jones found in Pembrokeshire a mysterious world of natural forces and enchantment, a refuge from the terrible realities of the times.

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By the same period, a number of artists, including Ben Nicholson and Barbara Hepworth, had established a colony at St Ives in Cornwall - and after the Second World War this fishing village at the far western end of Britain had become an internationally renowned centre for abstract art.

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Artists such as Peter Lanyon married a commitment to new techniques to a romantic vision in large canvases, which created an entirely new form of landscape art.




SEE ALSO:

  • Visit England map


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