Provenance: The Artists Family
The Long Jouney - the title of one of
Sorrell most evocative compositions – exemplifies the Neo Romantic
movement which flowered during the interwar period. The narrative
both engages and unsettles the viewer - the composition suggests that more of
the story is unfolding beyond the confines of the space into which the viewer
peers but cannot see beyond.
Richard Sorrell, the artit's son has described The Long Journey as follows:
This carefully planned, double-focussed composition shows a domestic tragedy. The path leads across the bridged ditch in a sweep that suggests the journey from birth to the afterlife. The powerfully drawn trees and plants are, like those in The Artist in the Campagna, drawn from Nature.
The 'longest journey', to which the title refers, is from a quotation from Shelley, and it is the journey through life in a loveless marriage, and this is at least in part the subject of the book (Forster always weaves a wonderful web of cross-references). Whether or not it my father referred to this is difficult to say. He was in an unsatisfactory marriage, and the picture does have to do with death - which is an important part of Forster's book, but in the book nobody dies from falling out of an apple tree. It is possible. 'The Longest Journey' was published in 1907 by Edward Arnold (by whom Alan was offered a job as art editor).
Exhibited: Sanctuary, Artist-Gardeners, 1919-39, Garden Museum, London, 25th February – 5 April, 2020
Literature: Christopher Woodward, Sanctuary: Artist-Gardeners, 1919–1939, published by Liss Llewellyn, 2020