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Lot 28: AR Cedric Morris (1889-1982) Panel of Flowers 61.2 x 50.9 cm. (24 x 20 in.)

Est: £30,000 GBP - £50,000 GBP
BonhamsLondon, United KingdomNovember 14, 2018

Item Overview

Description

Cedric Morris
(1889-1982)
Panel of Flowers signed and dated 'CEDRIC/MORRIS/29' (lower left)oil on canvas61.2 x 50.9 cm. (24 x 20 in.)Painted in September 1929
Provenance: Sir Rex Cohen (1906-1988) and thence by family descentPrivate Collection, U.K.'I like to think that behind this special painting an esoteric line of thought that expresses itself in symbols portraying the eternity of experience that flowers themselves have' ('Concerning Flower Painting', The Studio, May 1942, pp.121-132)Although a frequent traveller, Cedric Morris spent much of the early 1920s based in Paris and the latter part of the decade working in a studio at 32 Great Ormond Street, London. During these years, the self-taught Morris developed complex surrealist, abstract and portrait practices. He engaged with leading art and society figures of the day, developing friendships as broad as Nancy Cunard and Peggy Guggenheim, Winifred and Ben Nicholson, Christopher Wood and John Banting. He staged his first one-man exhibition in Rome in 1922 and was represented in the British Pavilion of the Venice Biennale in 1928 (and again in 1932). He exhibited as part of the Seven & Five Society and had one man shows with Arthur Tooth and in The Hague. Following a decade of city life, in early 1929 Morris and his partner Arthur Lett-Haines took a lease on Pound Farm in Suffolk, known simple as The Pound. The move to the country was to be permanent, the couple latterly moving to nearby Benton End and there establishing The East Anglian School of Painting (and famously tutoring Lucian Freud). Although the move from the metropolis to The Pound provided a fresh setting, Morris and Lett-Haines' vibrant lifestyle followed them. They hosted many an elaborate party which a student of Morris recalled 'at my young age showed me what real parties were! People would turn up from all over Suffolk, or drive down from London, often in fancy dress. I remember John Banting wearing a magnificent head-dress made from rolled newspapers, Daphne Bousfield in a leopard skin with blue varnish on her toe nails and Tony Butts in wide bottomed sailor's trousers and a string of dried gourdes round his neck ... everyone behaved disgracefully and had a lovely time!' (Joan Warburton quoted in exh.cat, Tate Gallery, 1984, p.48). To enhance the exotic nature of the Suffolk farmstead Morris and Lett-Haines kept a peacock named Ptolemy, a yellow crested cockatoo, Cocky, and Rubio the macaw, allowing them free rein of the house and gardens. Against this joyous background, Morris embarked on some of his most celebrated pictures – the riotous, vivid flower-pieces, such as the present September example. Much richer than the confines associated with the traditional discipline of still-life, these works exude the roaring energy of the environment in which they were executed.

Artist or Maker

Auction Details

Modern British and Irish Art

by
Bonhams
November 14, 2018, 02:00 PM GMT

101 New Bond Street, London, LDN, W1S 1SR, UK