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Two Harlequin Figures

Print
early 1950s (printed)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

This print by Ron Holmes is titled Two Harlequin Figures and it was inspired by the spirit of art and design generated by the Festival of Britain in 1951. Holmes designed textiles and commercial graphics, and worked as a printmaker and photographer alongside teaching graphic design. Holmes worked with a variety of print techniques such as linocut and woodcut; this print is a lithograph.

The harlequin and his ballerina partner are frozen in mid-dance, with a deconstructed town scene in the background. The strong colours are limited to yellow, blue and red. The expressive movement of the dancers corresponds to the vivid colours used.


Object details

Categories
Object type
TitleTwo Harlequin Figures (assigned by artist)
Materials and techniques
Colour lithograph
Brief description
Colour lithograph, 'Two Harlequin Figures', by Ronald Frederick Holmes, ca. 1951
Physical description
Print showing two harlequin figures dancing, evoking the spirit or art and design generated by the Festival of Britain (1951)
Dimensions
  • Plate height: 49cm
  • Plate width: 38cm
  • Sheet height: 63cm
  • Sheet width: 50.5cm
The plate has uneven edges so the size may slightly vary
Copy number
2/9
Marks and inscriptions
'1/9 CEH pp RF Holmes' (bottom margin)
Credit line
Purchased through the Julie and Robert Breckman Print Fund
Subjects depicted
Summary
This print by Ron Holmes is titled Two Harlequin Figures and it was inspired by the spirit of art and design generated by the Festival of Britain in 1951. Holmes designed textiles and commercial graphics, and worked as a printmaker and photographer alongside teaching graphic design. Holmes worked with a variety of print techniques such as linocut and woodcut; this print is a lithograph.

The harlequin and his ballerina partner are frozen in mid-dance, with a deconstructed town scene in the background. The strong colours are limited to yellow, blue and red. The expressive movement of the dancers corresponds to the vivid colours used.
Collection
Accession number
E.449-2003

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Record createdOctober 31, 2003
Record URL
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