Cecil Collins (1908–1989)

The Fools of Summer

£12,000.00

SKU: 13020
Presentation:
framed

Size:
Height – 53cm x Width – 65cm

1 in stock

DESCRIPTION

Provenance:
Gifted in 1991 by Elizabeth Collins, Cecil’s wife to a close family friend.

 

Gouache, signed and dated by the artist.

Exhibited at the Society of Mural Painters exhibition, Victoria and Albert Museum,  London in 1953

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THE ARTIST

Cecil
Collins
1908–1989

Born in Plymouth in 1908, Cecil Collins overcame early hardship to become a renowned British painter. After art school, he married sculptor Elisabeth Ramsden and had his first exhibition in 1935, showcasing his mystical approach. Influenced by figures like Paul Klee and Mark Tobey, and movements such as Surrealism and German Expressionism, Collins began his significant “Fools” series while teaching at Dartington Hall.

His career saw the publication of a monograph and his own text, The Vision of the Fool, cementing his ties to visionary Neo-Romanticism. Collins had major retrospectives at the Whitechapel Gallery (1959) and the Tate Gallery (1989), the latter coinciding with his death. He also undertook religious commissions and was awarded the MBE in 1979.

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Cecil Collins (1908–1989)

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