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31 January 2025
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Graham Sutherland
Study: Tin Mine: Miner emerging from a Stope
, 1942
19 x 14.5 cm. (7.5 x 5.7 in.)
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Graham Sutherland
British, 1903–1980
Study: Tin Mine: Miner emerging from a Stope
,
1942
Graham Sutherland
Study: Tin Mine: Miner emerging from a Stope
, 1942
19 x 14.5 cm. (7.5 x 5.7 in.)
close
Contact the gallery
for more images
View to Scale
Zoom
Medium
Works on paper, Ink, pencil and chalk
Size
19 x 14.5 cm. (7.5 x 5.7 in.)
Markings
Inscribed with title
Price
Price on Request
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Christopher Kingzett Fine Art
London
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About this Artwork
Movement
Modern Art
Provenance
Pier Paolo and Marzia Ruggerini, Milan; and thence by descent
Exhibitions
Palazzo Reale, Milan and the Accademia Ligustica, Genoa, Sutherland: Disegni di Guerra 1979 (87, repr. p.98)
The Imperial War Museum, Sutherland: The War Drawings 1982 (82, repr. p. 40)
The Penlee House Gallery and Museum, Penzance and the National Waterfront Museum, Swansea, Graham Sutherland: From Darkness into Light: Mining, Metal and Machines 2013-2014 (p. 19, repr.)
Literature
Douglas Cooper, Graham Sutherland, 1961 (46B, repr.)
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Description
In 1942 Sutherland, in his capacity as an official war artist, was commissioned to paint the tin mines at Geevor in Cornwall. “To make drawings of the mines had only the vaguest relation to the war but I was certainly presented with a new world – and a world of such beauty and such mystery that I shall never forget it……”.
In Roger Berthoud’s opinion the tin mine drawings are “Sutherland’s finest work as a war artist.” Inspired by the dramatic subject matter and almost certainly influenced by Henry Moore’s recent series of Shelter drawings, Sutherland creates an extraordinarily vivid record of the miners’ claustrophobic world. The drawings are also remarkable for their use of wax resist – a medium much used by the succeeding generation of neo-Romantic artists.
This drawing was part of the group bought by Pier Paolo and Marzia Ruggerini at the time of the exhibition of Sutherland’s war-time drawings organised by the British Council in Milan in 1979. The Ruggerinis first met Sutherland in 1965. Pier Paolo was a celebrated Italian film maker and in 1967 his documentary on the artist led Sutherland to return to Wales to paint there for the first time in twenty years. The Ruggerinis became great friends and collectors of Sutherland. Their house, Il Castello in Pavia near Milan, had a famous collection of the artist’s work.
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