James Tower.
English ( b.1919 - d.1988 ).
Still Life Of Flowers In A Jug And A Plate Of Fruit.
Watercolour & Ink.
Image size 15.4 inches x 13 inches ( 39cm x 33cm ).
Frame size 22.2 inches x 19.3 inches ( 56.5cm x 49cm ).
Available for sale from Big Sky Fine Art in the English county of Dorset, this original wartime painting is by the English ceramic artist James Tower and dates from 1940 to 1945.
The watercolour is presented and supplied in a sympathetic contemporary frame (which is shown in these photographs), mounted using new conservation materials and behind non-reflective Artglass AR 70™glass.
This vintage painting is in good condition, commensurate with its age. The painting is now preserved for future adoration and is ready to hang and to be appreciated.
One of Britain’s most important 20th-century ceramic artists; a quintessentially English sculptor, painter and teacher who was dedicated to his craft.
James Tower was born on the Isle of Sheppey in Kent, and brought up in a landscape of tidal estuaries, reeds, fish, shells and patterns of water on sand that greatly influenced his later work. He had a childhood accident that blinded him in one eye.
He left home at 17 and decided to travel the world, eventually making his way to the South Seas. On his return, he studied painting at the Royal Academy, (1938-40), and his talent was recognised when he won the Gold Medal for Painting in 1939.
During the Second World War he enrolled for service and spent the war working in camouflage and mapping at the Polish Ministry of Information. He married fellow student Maureen McManus in 1944. After the war he returned to art, enrolling at the Slade School of Art in 1946. Here he attended Dora Billington’s classes and became fascinated with ceramics. After he graduated, he took further classes in the medium at the London Institute under the British potter William Newland.
In 1949 Tower was invited to set up a ceramics course at th
...e progressive Bath Academy, Corsham. Here he became a celebrated teacher, setting up Pottery in old stables at Beechfield, and taught all aspects of ceramics including technology, taking students on local excavations. He established a diverse artistic environment, teaching and working alongside artists such as Terry Frost, Kenneth Armitage, William Scott and Peter Lanyon. Surrounded by such individualistic and impassioned artists, Tower began to develop his own unique approach to ceramics. His work was characterised by an emphasis on abstract; organic forms and painterly surfaces, evoking notions of nature, particularly foliage, water and the landscape. In 1963 he won a Leverhulme Research Award for terracotta research. Tower remained in post at Bath until 1964.
In 1966 he became Head of Fine Art at Brighton College of Art, where he set up a sculpture course and remained in post until 1986.
As a sculptor and ceramicist Tower is known for his domestic pottery, terracotta sculpture and large glazed forms. He often used the sea as a motif in his work, using wave patterns to create a sense of movement, and his textured surfaces are reminiscent of shells and crustaceans.
© Big Sky Fine Art
For a full biography of this artist please see his listing on www.bigskyfineart.com .
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Antique Number: SA1112376
Dateline of this antique is 1940
Height is 56.5cm (22.2inches)Width is 49cm (19.3inches)Depth is 1.2cm (0.5inches)
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