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Landscape

Print
1949 (printed)
Artist/Maker

As with several artists of his generation, Keith Vaughan was associated with a style known as Neo-Romantic. Characteristically, Neo-Romantic work focuses on landscape or on figures in a landscape with tendencies, more or less, toward abstraction. Vaughan was influenced particularly by the Picasso and Matisse exhibitions held at the V&A in 1946. Shortly after the Second World War had ended, a number of initiatives were developed to encourage contemporary artists to create colour prints. A demand for them grew, resulting in an explosion of popular printmaking in the late 1950s and 1960s. This is the first in a series of nine lithographs by Vaughan published by the Redfern Gallery, London, between 1949 and 1956, by which time he had an international reputation.


Object details

Categories
Object type
TitleLandscape (assigned by artist)
Materials and techniques
Colour lithograph on paper
Brief description
'Landscape' colour lithograph by Keith Vaughan, 1949
Physical description
Colour lithograph on paper depicting a landscape with a tree and a low flat-roofed building and a rocky outcropping behind. Printed in green, brown and black on a white ground.
Dimensions
  • Sheet height: 46.2cm
  • Sheet width: 55.7cm
Style
Production typeLimited edition
Marks and inscriptions
Keith Vaughan /49 (Signature; date; pencil)
Production
Attribution note: This may be a proof. It is not numbered.
Subject depicted
Summary
As with several artists of his generation, Keith Vaughan was associated with a style known as Neo-Romantic. Characteristically, Neo-Romantic work focuses on landscape or on figures in a landscape with tendencies, more or less, toward abstraction. Vaughan was influenced particularly by the Picasso and Matisse exhibitions held at the V&A in 1946. Shortly after the Second World War had ended, a number of initiatives were developed to encourage contemporary artists to create colour prints. A demand for them grew, resulting in an explosion of popular printmaking in the late 1950s and 1960s. This is the first in a series of nine lithographs by Vaughan published by the Redfern Gallery, London, between 1949 and 1956, by which time he had an international reputation.
Bibliographic reference
Taken from Departmental Circulation Register 1950
Collection
Accession number
CIRC.116-1950

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Record createdDecember 15, 2002
Record URL
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