|
Date: |
|
Description: | This self-portrait shows the artist, Joseph Southall, in front of a landscape setting. Like many of Southall's works it is reminiscent of early Italian masters, particularly the portraits of Piero della Francesca and his contemporaries. Southall had studied at the School of Art, and although unlike many of his contemporaries, he did not return to teach at School of Art, students and local artists were regular visitors to his studio where he would demonstrate the techniques of tempera and fresco. Encouraged by the Pre-Raphaelite artist Edward Burne-Jones (1833-1898), Joseph Southall spent years exploring the use of tempera. This is a Buon fresco panel, or true fresco, which has the same flatness of colour as tempera. The pigments, simply suspended in water, are painted onto freshly applied and still wet lime plaster, as it dries the colour then becomes part of the wall itself. However, it is not known if this fresco was ever part of a wall and then subsequently detached, or completed as an exercise in itself. The work was exhibited at Leicester in 1926, Liverpool in 1926 and at the Birmingham, RWS (Royal Watercolour Society) and Bournemouth memorial exhibitions in 1945 and again at Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery in 1980. | Subjects: | painting | Source: | Vads | Creator: | Artist: Joseph Edward Southall Nationality: British | Identifier: | http://www.vads.ac.uk/large.php?uid=6800... | Go to resource |
|
|