Doris Zinkeisen: ‘Work’ Artist’s record of mural designed for the Arts and Crafts exhibition, Royal Academy, 1916 - on Art WW I

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Doris Zinkeisen:
‘Work’ Artist’s record of mural designed for the Arts and Crafts exhibition, Royal Academy, 1916

Framed (ref: 9975)

Oil on panel

Signed with initils

11 x 37 ½ in. (27.9 x 95.2 cm)

Tags: Doris Zinkeisen oil panel murals women work Fifty Works by Fifty British Women Artists 1900 - 1950



Provenance: Darnley Fine Art Ltd.


She may not sound it, but Doris Zinkeisen was half-Welsh and half- Scottish. She began her training in Glasgow and won a scholarship to the Royal Academy Schools where she started in July 1917. She had already been singled out by Charles Sims RA to contribute a seventeen-foot mural to the Royal Academy’s Arts and Crafts exhibition of the previous year. It represented ‘Work’ but, along with Sims’ thirty-foot wide canvas for the same show, was considered lost until both were discovered in 2015, rolled up on the floor of a basement packing area of the Royal Academy. Zinkeisen’s full-scale mural has been nibbled around the edges, especially at the top and right-hand side, but what was either a study for it or a record of the composition survives in perfect condition, in the form of this present smaller oil on panel. It amply reveals her flair for design and lively sense of humour, with a clever combination of patterns, colour repetitions and variations across its surface. The three bowlerhatted city types, in their matching spats, are wittily echoed in the three labourer’s picks and even in the portly, bowler-wearing costermonger’s bananas. The ladder at the left, the cart, the wheel and donkey, initiate the movement that drives the whole composition from left to right. The backward gesture of the costermonger only serves to emphasise the unstoppable momentum against the vertical intervals of the background buildings. It is a pageant of delightful variety, but one where all are caught up in that familiar morning rush: to work.

Commentary by Robin Simon, Editor of The British Art Journal and Visiting Professor of English at UCL. His latest book is The Royal Academy of Arts: History and Collections (2018).


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