Roy Turner Durrant: Space machine 1944 - on Art WW I

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Roy Turner Durrant:
Space machine 1944

Passe-partout (ref: 3281)

Signed and dated 12.5.1944

Watercolour and pen and ink, 9 x 11 1/2 in. (23 x 29.2 cm.)

Tags: Roy Turner Durrant ink pen and ink watercolour Highlights of 20/21 Art Fair transport war



From childhood onwards Durrant was fascinated by drawing aeroplanes, later working at Vickers from 1956-63.  After war service in the Army he attended Camberwell School of Arts and Crafts, 1948-52, being influenced by Keith Vaughan and John Minton. In 1950's developed from figuration to abstraction. He said that any titles on his pictures were "meant to be interpreted as poetry, to engender a state of mind rather than describe exactly what the particular picture is." He was much influenced by European abstractionists and by English poetry, such as that of Gerard Manley Hopkins and Thomas Hardy, also by the work of James Joyce, Samuel Beckett and Dylan Thomas. He showed with Free Painters and Sculptors, of which he was a fellow, and with NEAC, of which he was a member, and quite often with RA from 1950. . Several dozen public collections hold his work, including Imperial War Museum, Bradford City Art Gallery and Balliol College, Oxford. Lived in Cambridge.

A monograph on Durrant, written by Peter Davies,  was due to be published by John Sansom in 2011


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