WHYTE'S ONLINE SUMMER ART SALE Monday 6 July 2020 6PM-10PM

34 27 Edward Morland Lewis (Welsh, 1903-1943) UNION QUAY, CORK, c. 1937 oil on canvas inscribed on reverse; also with Leicester Galleries label on reverse 18 by 24in. (45.7 by 61cm) Frame: 23 by 29in. (58 by 74cm.) Condition: The work appears to be in very good condition. The canvas is taut and stable. There are no signs of cracking or flaking of the paint. There is some surface dirt visible on close inspection. Exhibited: ‘Artists of Fame and of Promise’, Leicester Galleries, London, July to September 1940, catalogue no. 60 Edward Morland Lewis was born in Carmarthen in 1902. He trained at St John’s Wood School of Art and at the Royal Academy Schools, London where he met Sickert. Morland Lewis promptly left the academy to work under Sickert as pupil and assistant. In 1930 he joined the London Artists’ Association and exhibited with this group until it disbanded in 1934. Many of his paintings were based on photographs he took himself. Like Sickert, he tended to paint patchwork areas of colour laid over warm under-painting. He concentrated on the seaside towns of south Wales, Ireland, northern France and Spain. A comparison of one of his photographs with the painting of the same scene reveals how completely he transformed the information from one medium into the language of another. The main composition is faithfully transcribed, but the tonal relationships are slightly exaggerated. He joined the staff of Chelsea College of Art, where his colleagues included Henry Moore, Graham Sutherland and John Piper. He died in north Africa in 1943 while on active service as a camouflage officer. €2,000-€3,000 (£1,800-£2,700 approx.) Click here for more images and to bid on this lot27

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