1960
Oil on board
51 x 81 cm
Private Collection, UK
Landscapes | Gardens Strange Pictures Seascapes | Coastal Scenes Birds Eye View Trees | Woods | Forests Works | 1960 to 1969 All Works in RA Summer Exhibitions 1937 to 1993
Recto: Signed and dated lower left: R. Eurich. ‘60
Other measurements: 51 x 81 [REP; Phillips]
England Lancashire Lytham St Annes The North boat estuary flats flower beds flowers fountain freighter garden gardens low tide marquee monument mud mud flats mysterious mystery mystical oil painting painting park river sailing ship statue tentIn the summer of 1960 our whole family was invited to stay with a good friend, Frank Kay, in Lytham St. Anne’s in Lancashire. He had recently been widowed and wanted some company. We loved his large rambling house, and grounds running down to the sand dunes with sharp marram grass. From upstairs windows you could see across to the River Ribble. My father must have sketched the view from their bedroom window.
Two opposed approaches to the British landscape were on display in 1961. Henry Lamb’s Wiltshire Village, exhibited per convention following the artist’s recent death, represented one faction (Fig. 1). A wistful pastoralism is resurrected in Lamb’s painting as farm labourers relax on a verge bathed in golden light. The open, inviting road allows the painting to be read lyrically as the viewer is absorbed into an elegiac memory of pre-war British identity. In the same vein, Richard Eurich’s Early Morning, Lytham Sands takes a commanding view over a serene daybreak. Light shattering through diffuse mists over a sweeping prospect offers …
Two opposed approaches to the British landscape were on display in 1961. Henry Lamb’s Wiltshire Village, exhibited per convention following the artist’s recent death, represented one faction (Fig. 1). A wistful pastoralism is resurrected in Lamb’s painting as farm labourers relax on a verge bathed in golden light. The open, inviting road allows the painting to be read lyrically as the viewer is absorbed into an elegiac memory of pre-war British identity. In the same vein, Richard Eurich’s Early Morning, Lytham Sands takes a commanding view over a serene daybreak. Light shattering through diffuse mists over a sweeping prospect offers a soothing meditation on the traditional continuity of British landscape painting. Hanging together in a prominent position in Gallery III, Lamb and Eurich’s work assured the Summer Exhibition attendees that the sun would rise, the seasons would turn, and a conservative vision of our island would consistently mediate artistic and emotional responses to the British landscape.
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