Archived Stock - This item is no longer available
Woodcuts by Eric Fitch Dalglish
Eric Fitch Dalglish was a wood-engraver, painter, draughtsman, author, illustrator and naturalist. Born in London, he studied at university both in London and Bonn, Germany and after WWI was taught engraving by Paul Nash. He exhibited at the Redfern Gallery, with the Society of Wood Engravers, of which he was a member, and the New English Art Club. Examples of his work are held by the British Museum, V&A Museum, Manchester City Art Gallery, and British Council Collection.
SOLD OUT
In stock
Published by Dent at the Temple Press, Letchworth in Great Britain. Framed
Recently Viewed Items
-
An Art Deco Cast Bronze London Underground escalator uplighter
An Art Deco Cast Bronze London Underground escalator uplighter
An archetypal piece of Art Deco station furniture, this cast bronze uplighter is not just a functional light but an iconic piece of Tube history. It was removed from its place on the escalators in 1974; unfortunately we only have the lamp, not the escalator it once graced, so now it is mounted on a small wooden plinth. The photograph on the right shows a prototype escalator assembly in the factory, with just such an uplighter in position on the left.
-
Pablo Picasso, Lithograph of a Bather Study of Edouard Manet’s, Luncheon on the the Grass. c1962
£350Pablo Picasso, Lithograph of a Bather Study of Edouard Manet’s, Luncheon on the the Grass. c1962
From 1959-1962 Pablo Picasso and his second wife Jacqueline lived at Château de Vauvenargues near Aix-en-Provence. He spent most of his time of his time on 140 drawings and 27 paintings, lino-cuts and cardboard models all on the theme of Manet’s, Le Déjeuner sur l’herbe. Manet's original painting from 1862 showing a nude woman sitting between two fully clothed men was a scandal for the time.£350