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Myles Tonks (1890 - 1960)

Study of Cumulus clouds

SKU: 7407
Oil on card
7 1/2 x 11 in. (19 x 28 cm)
Presentation:
framed

Size:
Height – 19cm x Width – 28cm

DESCRIPTION

Provenance:
The Artist’s Estate; Private collection


Provenance: Ickenham United Reformed Church

Benefiting from the unrivalled teaching of his uncle, Henry Tonks, Myles Tonks excelled in painting on-the-spot landscape and coastal views, responding especially to the rugged scenery of the Scottish Highlands. According to his grandson, Myles Bevis, he enjoyed travelling to areas where he could be alone and at one with the countryside and as removed as possible from humanity such as remote mountainous country and serene coastal areas.  His mainly landscape art reflects this outlook and rarely features people.  Excluding sketches, photos and notes which were carried out in situ most of his art was created from these in the studio, cigarette in long holder clamped firmly between his teeth, and oil paintings in various stages of completion were scattered all around this until dry enough to receive the next layer or the final touches to the sky.  Tonks’ paintings were rarely signed by the artist unless created to be exhibited or had been commissioned. Myles Tonks was also a much respected medical general practitioner which he retired from  in 1958.  

We are grateful to Myles Bevis for assistance

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THE ARTIST

Myles Tonks
Myles
Tonks
1890 - 1960

Painter and draughtsman who was by profession a surgeon, born at
Darley, Warwickshire. Studied at Medway School of Art and with Henry
Tonks. Myles was the only relation with whom Henry cared to talk about
painting and the former Slade Professor left Myles his art books.
Exhibited RA, NEAC, RI, ROI, RHA, PS and elsewhere. Percy V Bradshaw in
his book Water-colour: A Truly English Art illustrates Tonks’ Col de
Lauteret mountainscape in which the artist looked for “translucency,
an unworried paper-surface”, a good example of his work. Lived at
Watchet, Somerset.

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