Tate Liverpool Exhibition

Paul Nash Modern Artist, Ancient Landscape

Paul Nash Flight of the Magnolia 1944 © Tate collection

Paul Nash 
Flight of the Magnolia 1944
© Tate 

Paul Nash (1889–1946) is one of the most important artists of the first half of the twentieth century and the most evocative landscape painter of his generation. He is best known for his work as an official war artist, producing some of the most memorable images of both the First and Second World Wars.

Nash was also a pioneer of modernism in Britain, promoting the avant-garde European styles of abstraction and Surrealism in the 1920s and 1930s. In 1933 he co-founded the influential modern art movement Unit One with fellow artists Henry Moore and Barbara Hepworth, and the critic Herbert Read. It was a short-lived but important move towards the revitalisation of English art in the inter-war period.

Nash, however, found his personal inspiration in the English landscape and he saw himself in the tradition of English mystical painters William Blake and Samuel Palmer. He was particularly drawn to landscapes with a sense of ancient history: grassy burial mounds, Iron Age hill forts and the standing stones at Avebury and Stonehenge. For him these sites had a talismanic quality which he called genius loci, or 'the spirit of a place', and he painted them repeatedly.

This exhibition examines Nash's approach to landscape painting throughout his career. It explores the quality of 'Englishness' in his work and attempt to combine his commitment to modernism with a visionary approach to nature and landscape.

Tate Liverpool

Royal Albert Dock Liverpool
Liverpool L3 4BB
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Dates

23 July – 19 October 2003

Find out more

  • A landscape of mortality

    Simon Grant1

    Paul Nash was preoccupied with his own mortality from childhood. But being posted as official artist to both world wars inspired him to some of his greatest work

  • Paul Nash, 1889–1946: Memorial Exhibition

    Paul Nash, 1889-1946: Memorial Exhibition: past Tate Britain exhibition

  • Thomas Guest and Paul Nash in Wiltshire: Two Episodes in the Artistic Approach to British Antiquity

    Sam Smiles

    The artistic representation of British antiquity brings in its wake a problem of methodology: how are the working assumptions of artists and archaeologists to be reconciled? This paper looks at two examples of artists responding to the deep past, both concerned with sites in Wiltshire. Thomas Guest (1754–1818) painted the grave goods from two barrows at Winterslow excavated in the 1810s. His paintings survived and were rediscovered in the mid 1930s. In that same decade the British artist Paul Nash encountered Avebury for the first time and responded to the prehistoric site in his own terms. The paper considers the two approaches and what they may tell us about the relationship between art and archaeology.

  • Wild Geese Over the Mountains: Melodrama and the Sublime in the English Imaginary 1933–9

    Ian Patterson

    The paper traces the frequency with which familiar tropes of the sublime are used in the writing and painting of the 1930s. Crowds, boundaries, mountains, theatricality and death carry a legacy of ideas of the sublime but tend to be treated allegorically rather than in their own right. Looking at paintings by Wyndham Lewis, Paul Nash and Edward Burra, and written works by Stephen Spender and Rex Warner, among others, I argue that the way the idea of history is conceptualised in the urgent melodramatic politics of the decade creates a different sort of sublime, one in which the inexpressible, the void, is located within time itself. Time, allegorised under the pressure of the intensity of political anxiety, becomes an uncanny sublimation of the sublime.

  • Artist

    Paul Nash

    1889–1946
  • Artist

    William Blake

    1757–1827
  • Artist

    Samuel Palmer

    1805–1881