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A joyful and celebratory gift book devoted to the work of the
much-loved English artist Eric Ravilious (1903–1942) and the
influence of natural forms and themes in his work. Eric Ravilious
was a designer, painter, printmaker and illustrator best known for
his depictions of the English landscape, particularly the South
Downs. Often described as a particularly ‘English’ artist, key
to his style was an ability to convey in watercolour the mild
vagaries of the British climate. His engagement with nature, though
romantic rather than precise, pervades his works in many different
techniques. This book explores his appreciation of the natural
world and the techniques he used in a variety of media to convey
those elements. Drawing on the V&A’s collections, more than
100 beautiful images capture Ravilious’s deep enjoyment of
everything in nature, from dewponds, cockerels, grassy hills, owls,
greenhouse geraniums, cornsheaves and snow, to the rainy seas,
airport-runway puddles and tideswept beaches of his later work as a
war artist. The book includes sections on weather, plants,
landscape, animals and birds, and ends with a section devoted to
man in the landscape, showcasing Ravilious’s love of rusting
machinery and other signs of human presence within nature, not
least his famous depictions of hillside chalk figures. This book
will appeal to those with a love of English landscapes, flora and
fauna or an interest in British art and design in the interwar
period.
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