Masterpieces of Twentieth-Century British Art

25 March - 25 May 2021
Overview

James Hyman, one of London's major dealers in modern British art, has curated a special presentation of iconic twentieth-century British paintings. At the heart of the display is Michael Andrews' enormous Colony Room Mural, 1958 [Oil on Canvas, 263 x 377 cm (103.36 x 148.16 inches)].

Michael Andrews Colony Room Mural is an icon of British cultural history by one of the most important British artists of the twentieth century. Painted on canvas, this picture was installed at the famous Colony Room Club in Soho for half a century until its closure in 2008. After cleaning off years of nicotine stains, the painting is revealed in its original glory. This small club was at the heart of London's creative life. In the 1950s and 1960s, it was a meeting place for Michael Andrews and his School of London friends Frank Auerbach, Francis Bacon and Lucian Freud, and in the 1990s was given new life by Damien Hirst, Sarah Lucas and the YBAs. Paintings by Andrews, especially large ones such as this, are very rare. In all he produced fewer than two hundred paintings, leading his friend Lucian Freud to declare that Andrews only painted masterpieces.

London is also the subject of one of Leon Kossoff's greatest late landscapes, the magisterial painting Kings Cross, Summer, 1998, [Oil on board, 183 x 193 cm (71.92 x 75.85 inches)]. Another London picture with a significant geographical association is R.B. Kitaj's If Not, Not (study for British Library Tapestry), 1992 [98 x 98 cm (hand woven tapestry 38.51 x 38.51 inches)]. This beautiful test section for the famous British Library tapestry is based on one of Kitaj's most famous works, the painting If Not, Not, and was handwoven by the world-renowned Dovecot Tapestry Studio.

Another large-scale highlight is one of the largest paintings ever made by Ivon Hitchens, The Fountain of Acis, 1964. [Oil on canvas, 238 x 198.5 cm (93.53 x 78.01 inches)]. On the theme of eternal love, the picture was, appropriately, commissioned by a husband to give to his wife. This huge painting is one of the largest and most ambitious works Hitchens ever painted. The Fountain of Acis rivalled the scale of the latest American painting and reaffirmed the artist's status at the forefront of the British avant-garde. Sharing the theme of love is Patrick Caulfield's major early painting, the romantic Three Roses, 1963 [Oil on board, 157 x 150 cm (61.70 x 58.95 inches)]. Caulfield combines the romance of roses with a diamond motif to create one of his sexiest paintings of the 1960s. The art writer Marco Livingstone has explained that 'Three Roses was painted as a wedding present for some friends, and it partakes deliberately of the festive tone and even - rather dangerously for a modernist artist - of the sentimentality of a congratulatory greetings card'.

In contrast, also presented will be three major paintings by Peter de Francia, the centenary of whose birth falls in 2021. As with his famous Disparates drawings, these rare paintings have a challenging immediacy despite their at times complex iconography, and their political message has a particular urgency in today's troubled times.

The presentation will also include other major works: figure paintings by Tony Bevan; photographs by Bill Brandt deaccessioned by MoMA, New York; an important sculpture by Prunella Clough; a rare Kitchen-sink period painting by Derrick Greaves; a collage by Nigel Henderson; a stripe gouache by Bridget Riley; and a sublime blue and brown abstraction by William Scott.

Works
  • Michael Andrews The Colony Room "Mural", 1958 Oil on canvas 263 x 377 cms 103 8/16 x 148 6/16 ins
    Michael Andrews
    The Colony Room "Mural", 1958
    Oil on canvas
    263 x 377 cms
    103 8/16 x 148 6/16 ins
  • Tony Bevan Intervention, 1984 Acrylic, pigment and charcoal on canvas 134.6 x 181.9 cms 52 15/16 x 71 9/16 ins
    Tony Bevan
    Intervention, 1984
    Acrylic, pigment and charcoal on canvas
    134.6 x 181.9 cms
    52 15/16 x 71 9/16 ins
    £ 38,000.00
  • Tony Bevan Head, 2002 Pigment and acrylic on canvas 100 x 130 cms 39 5/16 x 51 2/16 ins
    Tony Bevan
    Head, 2002
    Pigment and acrylic on canvas
    100 x 130 cms
    39 5/16 x 51 2/16 ins
    £ 48,000.00 +VAT +ARR
  • Tony Bevan Head, 2004 Acrylic, pigment and charcoal on canvas 200.6 x 165 cms 78 15/16 x 64 15/16 ins
    Tony Bevan
    Head, 2004
    Acrylic, pigment and charcoal on canvas
    200.6 x 165 cms
    78 15/16 x 64 15/16 ins
  • Bill Brandt, Barmaid at the Crooked Billet, Tower Hill, London, 1939, 1939
    Bill Brandt, Barmaid at the Crooked Billet, Tower Hill, London, 1939, 1939
  • Bill Brandt, Gull’s Nest on Mid-Summer Night, Isle of Skye, 1947, 1947
    Bill Brandt, Gull’s Nest on Mid-Summer Night, Isle of Skye, 1947, 1947
  • Prunella Clough Bronze Relief Bronze 41.8 x 57.2 x 10 cms 16 7/16 x 22 8/16 x 3 14/16 ins
    Prunella Clough
    Bronze Relief
    Bronze
    41.8 x 57.2 x 10 cms
    16 7/16 x 22 8/16 x 3 14/16 ins
    £ 10,000.00 +ARR
  • Peter De Francia Disparates (Neither Rhyme nor Reason) Oil on canvas 167.7 x 122 cms 66 1/16 x 48 1/16 ins
    Peter De Francia
    Disparates (Neither Rhyme nor Reason)
    Oil on canvas
    167.7 x 122 cms
    66 1/16 x 48 1/16 ins
    £ 22,000.00
  • Peter De Francia Hallowed Rituals (Mutilés de Guerre or Dulce et decorum) Oil on canvas 136 x 121 cms 53 1/2 x 47 3/4 ins
    Peter De Francia
    Hallowed Rituals (Mutilés de Guerre or Dulce et decorum)
    Oil on canvas
    136 x 121 cms
    53 1/2 x 47 3/4 ins
    £ 20,000.00
  • Peter De Francia Hallowed Rituals (Sharp Practice) Oil on canvas 121 x 136 cms 47 3/4 x 53 1/2 ins
    Peter De Francia
    Hallowed Rituals (Sharp Practice)
    Oil on canvas
    121 x 136 cms
    47 3/4 x 53 1/2 ins
    £ 20,000.00
  • Derrick Greaves, Lovers, 1958
    Derrick Greaves, Lovers, 1958
  • Derrick Greaves Simon and Bedspread, 1958 Oil on canvas 76.5 x 115 cms 30 1/16 x 45 4/16 ins
    Derrick Greaves
    Simon and Bedspread, 1958
    Oil on canvas
    76.5 x 115 cms
    30 1/16 x 45 4/16 ins
    £ 24,000.00
  • Derrick Greaves The Actress Entertained, 1979 Acrylic collage on canvas 92.7 x 227.3 cms 36 7/16 x 89 7/16 ins
    Derrick Greaves
    The Actress Entertained, 1979
    Acrylic collage on canvas
    92.7 x 227.3 cms
    36 7/16 x 89 7/16 ins
    £ 25,000.00
  • Nigel Henderson The best days of your life, 1975 Collage on card 23 x 30 cms 9 1/16 x 11 12/16 ins
    Nigel Henderson
    The best days of your life, 1975
    Collage on card
    23 x 30 cms
    9 1/16 x 11 12/16 ins
    £ 6,500.00
  • Ivon Hitchens The Fountain of Acis, 1964 Oil on canvas. 238 x 198.5 cms 93 11/16 x 78 2/16 ins Signed and dated lower left. Titled lower right.
    Ivon Hitchens
    The Fountain of Acis, 1964
    Oil on canvas.
    238 x 198.5 cms
    93 11/16 x 78 2/16 ins
    Signed and dated lower left.
    Titled lower right.
  • Leon Kossoff, Kings Cross, Summer, 1998
    Leon Kossoff, Kings Cross, Summer, 1998
Press release

James Hyman, one of London's major dealers in modern British art, has curated a special presentation of iconic twentieth-century British paintings. At the heart of the display is Michael Andrews' enormous Colony Room Mural, 1958 [Oil on Canvas, 263 x 377 cm (103.36 x 148.16 inches)].

Michael Andrews Colony Room Mural is an icon of British cultural history by one of the most important British artists of the twentieth century. Painted on canvas, this picture was installed at the famous Colony Room Club in Soho for half a century until its closure in 2008. After cleaning off years of nicotine stains, the painting is revealed in its original glory. This small club was at the heart of London's creative life. In the 1950s and 1960s, it was a meeting place for Michael Andrews and his School of London friends Frank Auerbach, Francis Bacon and Lucian Freud, and in the 1990s was given new life by Damien Hirst, Sarah Lucas and the YBAs. Paintings by Andrews, especially large ones such as this, are very rare. In all he produced fewer than two hundred paintings, leading his friend Lucian Freud to declare that Andrews only painted masterpieces.

London is also the subject of one of Leon Kossoff's greatest late landscapes, the magisterial painting Kings Cross, Summer, 1998, [Oil on board, 183 x 193 cm (71.92 x 75.85 inches)]. Another London picture with a significant geographical association is R.B. Kitaj's If Not, Not (study for British Library Tapestry), 1992 [98 x 98 cm (hand woven tapestry 38.51 x 38.51 inches)]. This beautiful test section for the famous British Library tapestry is based on one of Kitaj's most famous works, the painting If Not, Not, and was handwoven by the world-renowned Dovecot Tapestry Studio.

Another large-scale highlight is one of the largest paintings ever made by Ivon Hitchens, The Fountain of Acis, 1964. [Oil on canvas, 238 x 198.5 cm (93.53 x 78.01 inches)]. On the theme of eternal love, the picture was, appropriately, commissioned by a husband to give to his wife. This huge painting is one of the largest and most ambitious works Hitchens ever painted. The Fountain of Acis rivalled the scale of the latest American painting and reaffirmed the artist's status at the forefront of the British avant-garde. Sharing the theme of love is Patrick Caulfield's major early painting, the romantic Three Roses, 1963 [Oil on board, 157 x 150 cm (61.70 x 58.95 inches)]. Caulfield combines the romance of roses with a diamond motif to create one of his sexiest paintings of the 1960s. The art writer Marco Livingstone has explained that 'Three Roses was painted as a wedding present for some friends, and it partakes deliberately of the festive tone and even - rather dangerously for a modernist artist - of the sentimentality of a congratulatory greetings card'.

In contrast, also presented will be three major paintings by Peter de Francia, the centenary of whose birth falls in 2021. As with his famous Disparates drawings, these rare paintings have a challenging immediacy despite their at times complex iconography, and their political message has a particular urgency in today's troubled times.

The presentation will also include other major works: figure paintings by Tony Bevan; photographs by Bill Brandt deaccessioned by MoMA, New York; an important sculpture by Prunella Clough; a rare Kitchen-sink period painting by Derrick Greaves; a collage by Nigel Henderson; a stripe gouache by Bridget Riley; and a sublime blue and brown abstraction by William Scott.


For sales enquiries please contact james@jameshymangallery.com
+44 07766331697