John Nash: Study of a wild rose, Rosa Acicularis, late 1940's - on Art WW I

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John Nash:
Study of a wild rose, Rosa Acicularis, late 1940's

Framed (ref: 7696)
Squared, inscribed with measurements
Pencil, pen and ink, watercolour, coloured pencil
10 x 10 in. (25.3 x 25.3 cm)

Tags: John Nash ink pen and ink pencil watercolour flowers Garden A Hanging Garden



Provenance: The Artist's Estate



John Nash was a keen plantsman.A passion he shared with Charles Mahoney, Edward Bawden, Geoffrey Rhoades, and Evelyn Dunbar.  This group regularly swapped cuttings with each other and cultivated their favoured plants in their gardens and recorded them in paintings and drawings.  Illustrations were produced for books - Mahoney and Dunbar had published Gardeners' Choice in 1937.  English Garden Flowers, for which this is likely to be a study, illustrated by Nash, was published by Duckworth, London, in 1948.  The inclusion of the disproportionately-sized pitch fork is reminiscent of the garden tool motifs that Mahoney and Dunbar enjoyed adding to the more playful of their line illustrations.



We are grateful to Daniel Simon for assistance.






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