£3,630
Adam and Eve Seen through a Window
Framed (ref: 2134)
Pen and ink with highlights in watercolour, on buff paper
Tags: Charles Mahoney ink pen and ink watercolour allegory flowers Garden men religion women 1.PORTRAIT OF AN ARTIST Mahoney
Pen and ink with highlights in watercolour, on buff paper
Tags: Charles Mahoney ink pen and ink watercolour allegory flowers Garden men religion women 1.PORTRAIT OF AN ARTIST Mahoney
Provenance: Private Collection
Literature: Llewellyn, Sacha, and Paul Liss. Portrait of an Artist. Liss Llewellyn, 2021, p.374.
Mahoney’s first depiction of Adam and Eve appears to date to the beginning of his relationship with Evelyn Dunbar in the mid 1930s; references to “Charlie and Eve” occur in their correspondence. The idea of the Garden of Eden encapsulated the feelings of both about plants and nature, a passion nourished by frequent trips to Kew Gardens. Mahoney delighted in depicting different points in the narrative (The Garden, The Temptation, The Expulsion) and the subject remained a recurrent theme right through to his last decorative panel, The Muses, in which elements of his vision of paradise gardens combine to form a remarkable panorama (see cat. no. 129).
Framed doublesided with ;