The artist's studio, circa 1938
Framed (ref: 4825)
Oil on panel
Tags: Stephen Bone oil panel artists at work interiors still lifes TOP 100 1.PORTRAIT OF AN ARTIST Mary Adshead (1904-1995) & Stephen Bone (1904-1958)
Oil on panel
Tags: Stephen Bone oil panel artists at work interiors still lifes TOP 100 1.PORTRAIT OF AN ARTIST Mary Adshead (1904-1995) & Stephen Bone (1904-1958)
Provenance: The Artist's Studio
Literature: Llewellyn, Sacha, and Paul Liss. Portrait of an Artist. Liss Llewellyn, 2021, p.56.
This probably shows Stephen Bone's studio at 43 Havestock Hill, to where he moved in 1938.
Bone’s
panels were painted in just a few hours of intense concentration and
testify to his painterly skill and sure sense of colour. They show his
family and friends and also his knowledge and love of landscapes and
townscapes in the l930s and 40s so much of which has now changed or
disappeared. From Ireland to Sweden and from Scotland to Spain he
carried his wooden paintbox fitted out with paints, brushes and a rack
of 3 or 4 primed panels. His equipment also included a three legged
folding wooden stool with a leather seat, a broad brimmed felt hat and,
in winter; fingerless woollen mittens.
In the 20s and 30s his
small oil panels were appreciated and, at first, sold well enough to
encourage galleries to mount more one man shows. His View of Santiago
shown at the Ryman’s Galleries in |1927 reminded the Oxford University
reviewer of "an early Corot in the freshness and I delicacy of its
treatment". At the Lefevre Gallery in 1932 the Morning Post critic wrote
appreciatively ; of his advances in observation and craftsmanship and
of his "developing sense of colour and the minor notes of grey, green
and the palest gold". The Manchester Guardian said that "Mr Bone is a
singularly modest artist. On looking at his landscapes one always feels
that he experienced some rather rare and delicate emotion which he is
offering a little diffidently to the spectator".
The prices of
the smaller pictures were seven guineas in the twenties, rising to
fourteen guineas at the end of the thirties and twenty one guineas in
his show at the Leicester Galleries at the end of 1946, where Stephen
sold 22 panels. Then the market changed, modern art was more widely
accepted and cheap colour images became available as colour
transparencies. Stephen continued to paint but few of his pictures sold,
he had to turn to broadcasting and journalism to earn a living.
Stephen
Bone was never part of a movement or school of painting. In his graphic
works (bookplates, bookcovers and illustrations,) he was sometimes
tempted by the style revolutions of the 1930’s but his paintings were a
straightforward realistic view of the world supported by a keen sense of
colour, technical skill and a knowledgeable observation of light,
clouds, waves, buildings, geology and vegetation. He had a special
interest in the weather about which he later wrote about in the Collins
‘Britain in Pictures‘ series. The paintings need to be considered
carefully to grasp how much they are of their time.
Bone was a
very tall man, in the early days he strode, up to 40 miles a day, to
reach his paintable locations or struggled with his kit to reach such
viewpoints as the top of Southwark Cathedral’s spiral stair; later he
was driven by his energetic and successful wife the mural painter Mary
Adshead and during the second world war he learned to ride an enormous
Raleigh bicycle. Later still he travelled by rail, sea and air in the
congenial company of intelligent and admiring friends who provided an
escape from the depressions he suffered as his paintings, in the post
war era, increasingly failed to sell.
Panel paintings by Stephen Bone can be seen in Tate, National Portrait Gallery, The Maritime Museum and The Imperial War Museum.
We are grateful to Sylvester Bone for the above catalogue notes