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07 January 2025
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Christopher Wood
Still life with flowers, fruit and clay pipe
, ca. 1927
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Christopher Wood
British, 1901–1930
Still life with flowers, fruit and clay pipe
,
ca. 1927
Christopher Wood
Still life with flowers, fruit and clay pipe
, ca. 1927
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for more images
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Medium
Paintings, Oil on canvas
Markings
Signed 'Christopher Wood' on stretcher period frame
Price
Price on Request
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Piano Nobile
London
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About this Artwork
Provenance
Crane Kalman Gallery 1960's
Mr & Mrs Rose Collection
Literature
Christopher Wood Memorial Exhibition, Redfern Gallery, 1937
Sebastian Faulks, The Fatal Englishman - Christopher Wood Hutchinson, 1996
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Description
This small still life possess immense charm and beauty and incorporates several elements which Wood painted throughout his career. But it is the clay pipe that tells us most about the artist.
This little object played a pivotal role in Wood's life as it was the means by which he smoked opium and is seen in several works, perhaps most famously in his masterpoiece of 1927, Self-Portrait (Kettles Yard, University fo Cambridge)
Wood would have familiarized himself with the work of Geroges Braque in Paris and he shows a firm understanding, flattening and simplifing the form of the pipe and fruit in contrast to the intricate work of the pink and white flower heads with their richly think impasto. Areas of the fruit, leaves and pipe have been left transparent, allowing the ledge the objects are resting on and the drapery of the background to become an integral part of the subject, on a stage-like setting, a technique shared with Braque to create brilliant ambiguities with space and perspective.
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