James WOOD (1889-1975) Huge Original Oil/Mixed Media Art Painting “Pic – French General Trading
James WOOD (1889-1975) Huge Original Oil/Mixed Media Art Painting “Picking Flowers” 1950’s
James WOOD (1889-1975) Huge Original Oil/Mixed Media Art Painting “Picking Flowers” 1950’s
James WOOD (1889-1975) Huge Original Oil/Mixed Media Art Painting “Picking Flowers” 1950’s
James WOOD (1889-1975) Huge Original Oil/Mixed Media Art Painting “Picking Flowers” 1950’s
James WOOD (1889-1975) Huge Original Oil/Mixed Media Art Painting “Picking Flowers” 1950’s
James WOOD (1889-1975) Huge Original Oil/Mixed Media Art Painting “Picking Flowers” 1950’s

James WOOD (1889-1975) Huge Original Oil/Mixed Media Art Painting “Picking Flowers” 1950’s

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£2,495.00
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£2,495.00

Rarely available

Huge 34”x48” Unframed Oil Mixed Media on Canvas

Artist: James WOOD 1889-1975

Title: Picking Flowers

Date: 1950’s approx

Sriking piece with large Impasto flowers

Condition: some flaking, but blends into this large impressive piece.

Painter, draughtsman, writer and aesthete, born in Southport, Lancashire. From 1908–11 he read history at Cambridge University, then in Paris after studying etching pursued painting with Percyval Tudor-Hart before going to Munich. During World War I was in the Army and Royal Flying Corps, later working on battleship camouflage. Among Wood’s writings after World War I were The Foundations of Aesthetics, fellow authors being C K Ogden and I A Richards. He also wrote on colour harmony, a favourite topic, and in 1926 published New World Vistas, an autobiographical work. From 1930s Wood was a student of Persian Art, which prompted him to learn Persian and to become art adviser to the Persian government. His own paintings were influenced by Kandinsky, and he showed at Leicester and Zwemmer Galleries in solo exhibitions.

After 1955 rarely exhibited, but painted several portraits of Cambridge academics. Wood lived in a remote cottage above Llantony, Monmouthshire, from which he continued to monitor artistic developments and where he worked until his death. In 1980 Blond Fine Art held a show of his output. Wood was married to a painter, Elisabeth Robertson, who had previously been the wife of the artist and writer Humphrey Slater.

Text source: 'Artists in Britain Since 1945' by David Buckman (Art Dictionaries Ltd, part of Sansom & Company)

His works hang in University of Cambridge and Yale Center for British Art