Provenance: Private collection
Exhibited: The V&A, London, First Exhibition of The Society of Mural Painters, organised by The Arts Council, 1950 (label to reverse)
Literature: Artmonsky, Ruth, A Snapper Up of Unconsidered Triffles, A tribute to Barbara Jones, illustrated p 114
A time traveller visiting mid twentieth-century Britain would discover a
painted world. Restaurants, department stores, schools and hospitals were
filled with murals painted by the best artists of the day. Aside from a few
celebrated examples (think Rex Whistler at Tate Britain), most of these
have disappeared, and in many cases not even a photograph survives. This
is true of the numerous murals painted by Barbara Jones, but occasionally
we find a treasure that has escaped the general destruction, whether a
mural itself or a study, as this seems to be. The Resort, which was shown
at the First Exhibition of the Society of Mural Painters (the Victoria and
Albert Museum, 1950), may have been related to Jones’ preparations for
the Festival of Britain in 1951, but almost seventy years later it stands by
itself as a work of great individuality and charm. Jones was taught by Eric
Ravilious, and there are hints here of her teacher’s preoccupations with
nautical design, improbably delicate structures and idiosyncratic wheeled
vehicles. Her imaginative world has its own style, however, and its own
distinctive palette. As so often with Jones, we see perspective and scale
treated with a childlike playfulness, but it is clear that a sophisticated
visual intelligence is at work. There’s a constant back and forth of dark
against light, light against dark, and a beguiling clarity of vision. We
sense that the scene, though in no way realistic, is real, and we share the
curiosity and awe of the children admiring the deep sea diver as the ice
cream seller looks on.
Commentary by James Russell, independent art historian and curator, most notably of exhibitions at Dulwich Picture Gallery devoted to Eric Ravilious (2015) and Edward Bawden (2018).