LONDON.- The Fine Art Societys summer exhibition will highlight the gallerys specialisms and heritage with the exhibition opening across both London and Edinburgh gallery spaces as they bring together an exquisite group of 40 works by pioneering British and Scottish artists who forged new ways of making art.
History of the New at The Fine Art Society includes an impressive collection of rarely-seen paintings, furniture and decorative arts from the 19th and 20th centuries. Notably, Sir John Laverys Portrait of a Lady in Grey and Black has not been seen in public since 1914 after it was bought 1901 by the present owners grandfather Nicol Paton Brown, a patron of the artist. Additionally, a devotional enamelware by Phoebe Traquair, the first woman member of the Royal Scottish Academy and leading figure within the Scottish Arts and Crafts movement who blurred the distinctions between fine and decorative arts, will form part of the exhibition highlights.
Alongside the outstanding work by British self-taught painter Keith Vaughan whose rare and early wartime gouache depicts a touching scene of a father and son in the Yorkshire dales, two large and impressionistic landscapes by William McTaggart one of Scotlands most daring nineteenth-century painters show his evolution from a Victorian painter to an Impressionist and Expressionist. His idiosyncratically anticipates much of the development of modern art.
Featuring a masterfully painted and fantastical oil painting by John Byrne from the late 1960s to important prints by Paul Nash and Kenneth Martin, radically modern watercolours by Arthur Melville and Charles Rennie Mackintosh, to a selection of paintings by the Glasgow Boys who defined the history of Scottish art and placed themselves at the forefront of British art, this exhibition showcases over 40 prominent Scottish and British artists as historical fine and decorative arts come together.
Scottish art forms a critical part of History of the New at The Fine Art Society, with works by outstanding Scottish Colourist F.C.B Cadell and a striking gouache painting by George Henry which will be displayed alongside furniture by Daniel Cottier whose style came to define the Aesthetic Movement and is credited with the spread of Aestheticism in the United States.
A rare and important watercolour painting by Charles Rennie Mackintosh will appear on the market for the first time after it was bought from the artists memorial exhibition in 1933. A tour de force amongst Mackintoshs late watercolours of the South of France, it has been at the Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art for many years and is a testament to the international regard with which this artist is held.
Highlights also include a rare decorative works including an exceptional Glasgow-style metalwork door plate by Talwin Morris, a Persian style tile by William de Morgan, and a jewel-like oil La Lavandeuse by founding member of the Camden Town Group Harold Gilman, as well as Joseph Crawhall's In the Paddock which has not been on the art market since the 1950s.
One of the UKs oldest fine art dealers, The Fine Art Society, has an established reputation for its expertise in British art and design from the 19th and 20th centuries and Scottish art from the 17th century to today. The Fine Art Societys integrated gallery spaces in both London and Edinburgh draws together the unique aesthetic and expertise of both physical galleries while also offering new digital initiatives. The exhibition will run from 2nd June 29th July and will also be available to explore online.
History of the New at The Fine Art Society is part of the inaugural NT Art Month a new festival in Edinburgh that celebrates the incredible arts quarter in Edinburghs New Town. This is an opportunity to enjoy these festivities further afield in London as History of the New will also be opening at The Fine Art Societys Soho gallery. Just a stones throw away from the capitals world-famous art district, the gallery space occupies a multi-storey Grade-II listed Georgian townhouse, which opened in October 2020.
Emily Walsh, Managing Director of The Fine Art Society, comments, Our summer show brings together artists who found themselves working at the threshold of the modern. It was this self-awareness and urge to make it new that motivated them as individuals and, for some, brought them into movements. They rejected the received wisdom of their day in favour of forging new ways of making art. They saw the world around them differently and made their mark telling us how. Amongst the myriad paintings and objects that will be on display in our two galleries in Edinburgh and London this summer are works from the 19th and 20th centuries; British and Scottish artists who worked as pioneers and whose work came to define a moment.