Newhaven Beach
Reproduction of image restricted by copyright
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About the work
- Location
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Country: Other
City: looted or destroyed
Destroyed or looted in riots, Baghdad, Iraq, 1958
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About the artist
John Piper was born in Epsom, Surrey and worked in his father’s solicitors’ firm until 1926. He later studied art in Richmond and London. Meeting Braque in Paris inspired him to make abstract art and to exhibit with the Seven and Five Society (1934–35). In 1935 Piper collaborated with Myfanwy Evans (later, his wife) on the pioneering review, ‘Axis’. He abandoned abstract art for Neo-Romanticism and during the Second World War, as an Official War Artist, he recorded bomb-devastated buildings of England’s disappearing architectural heritage. A versatile artist, Piper made book illustrations, theatre designs, ceramics, stained-glass and textiles. He collaborated with Patrick Reyntiens on stained glass projects which included the baptistry window for what was then the new Coventry Cathedral, and the stained glass lantern for Liverpool Metropolitan Cathedral. Retrospectives of Piper's work were held at the Museum of Modern Art (Oxford, 1973) and the Tate (1983–84).
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Explore
- Places
- Subjects
- topography, seascape/coastal scene, sea, beach
- Materials & Techniques
- paper (as artists material), watercolour (as artists materials), watercolour (as object name)
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Details
- Artist
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John Piper (1903 - 1992)
- Title
- Newhaven Beach
- Date
- 6 July 1954
- Medium
- Watercolour on paper
- Dimensions
- height: 35.60 cm, width: 55.90 cm
- Inscription
- br: John Piper Newhaven Beach July 6 1954
- Provenance
- Consigned by the artist to Leicester Galleries, London; from whom purchased by the Ministry of Works in September 1955
- GAC number
- 3284