Presentation: Framed
Signed with monogram t.l.: ‘FB’. Also inscribed (in another hand) verso: ‘122’ and ‘WdeB Coll’ Black ink, crayon and brown paint on paper, 7.5 × 20cm (3 × 7⅞in) Provenance: William de Belleroche (No 205C); Christie's, 18 July 1961, part Lot 9; Gordon Anderson
Presentation: Unmounted
Signed with monogram b.l.: ‘FB’ and inscribed across bottom of image: ‘l’. Also inscribed (in another hand) b.r.: ‘WdeB Coll’ Black ink and brush on Temple Lodge headed notepaper, 16×12cm (6¼×4¾in) Provenance: William de Belleroche (No 190); Gordon Anderson
The face was probably intended to be printed as a woodcut as with cat 127–137.
Presentation: Unmounted
Etching proof with pen alterations, 17.6×13.7cm (6⅞×5⅜in) Provenance: Edgar Peacock; Edgar Horns, Eastbourne, 20 September 2000 Ill: L’Ombre de la Croix, Book 2, p243 Verso pencil sketches and inscription ‘See Ruskins life/of Turner dealing/with his boy hood/Modern painters’
Thumbnail panels:
Frank Brangwyn [prints] 1867-1956
Frank Brangwyn was born in Bruges, Belgium, the son of an English father and Welsh mother. The family returned to London in 1874, Brangwyn's father gaining work as a designer of buildings, embroideries and furniture. Although Brangwyn appears to have had little formal education, whether academic or artistic, his earliest mentors were three of the most influential men in design at the turn of the century: Arthur Heygate Mackmurdo, William Morris and Siegfried Bing. Between 1884 and 1887 Brangwyn travelled to Kent, Cornwall and Devon, before venturing further with trips to Turkey in 1888, South Africa in 1891, Spain in 1892 and Morocco in 1893.
Brangwyn was an independent artist, an experimenter and innovator, capable of working on both large and small scale projects, ranging from murals, oil paintings, watercolours, etchings, woodcuts and lithographs to designs for architecture, interiors, stained glass, furniture, carpets, ceramics and jewellery, as well as book illustrations, bookplates and commercial posters. It is estimated that he produced over 12,000 works during his lifetime. Mural commissions included the Worshipful Company of Skinners, London (1902-09), St Aidan's church, Leeds (1908-16), Manitoba Legislative Building, Winnipeg, Canada (1918-21), Christ's Hospital, Horsham (1912-23), State Capitol, Jefferson City, USA (1915-25), the British Empire panels, Swansea (1925-32), and Rockefeller Center, New York (1930-34). Brangwyn married Lucy Ray in 1896 and took on the lease of Temple Lodge, Hammersmith, in 1900. In 1918 the artist purchased The Jointure, Ditchling, where he spent most of his time following his wife's death in 1924. Elected RA in 1919, knighted in 1924, holder of countless artistic awards, Brangwyn was modest about his singular achievements, regarding art as an occupation and describing himself as a designer.