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Arthur Studd:
Blue sky and clouds with branches of fruit trees to the fore, South of France
Unframed (ref: 4703)
Paper label '352' attached to reverse
Oil on panel, 8 3/4 × 6 1/4 in. (22.2 × 15.8 cm.)
Tags: Arthur Studd oil panel landscape British Artists in Europe
Provenance: Peter Cochran;The Fine Art Society Exhibited: (?) Arthur
Studd, Alpine Club Gallery, London, June 1911
After meeting Whistler in Paris in 1892, Studd worked with him in 1894
and 1895 in London, where they were neighbours in Chelsea for some
ears.The style of this panel, which is related to three other views of
Venice by Studd on similar sized panels (Tate), is indebted to
Whistler’s paintings of beaches and seascapes. Studd was also a
collector, and he bequeathed three major works by Whistler to the
National Gallery, London (now in the Tate Collection): Symphony in
White, No. 2:The Little White Girl; The Fire Wheel; and Nocturne: Blue
and Silver – Cremorne Lights). It’s commonly believed that Paul Gauguin
worked in isolation in Tahiti, living in self-imposed exile from France
and far from the reach of the European avant-garde. But from 1897 to
1898 Gauguin was joined in Tahiti by a British painter, Arthur Haythorne
Studd (1863 – 1919). It was Studd’s wish, as he declared in a letter to
his friend James McNeil Whistler (dated 22 June, 1897), to establish a
‘Studio of the South Seas’, and his work from Tahiti includes the View
from Gauguin’s House, of 1898. This paper will compare Studd’s paintings
to Gauguin’s treatment of the Tahitian subject, and examine how these
artists imagined the Islands for a modern European audience. It will
tease out the various influences on Studd’s Tahitian work, from his
Slade School and Academie Julian training, to his ties to Whistler, and
an artistic circle which included the New English Art Club, French
painters Degas, Picard, and Puvis de Chavannes, and Australian Charles
Conder. Notwithstanding the influence of contemporary artists, Studd’s
paintings will also be understood in the context of colonial modernity
and the extent to which modern political, economic and cultural agendas
may have impacted his treatment of the Tahitian subject. Though the
focus of this paper is on Studd’s contact with Gauguin and modernist
re-imaginings of the Pacific Islands, it will also begin a biography of
this important British painter and collector, whose story remains to be
told. (2008 paper from the University of Queensland, S Australia) Studd
had one-man exhibitions during his lifetime at The Goupil Gallery
(1896), The Baillie Gallery (1906) and The Alpine Club Gallery, London,
(1911). He excelled in small plein air sketches in oil on panel.