Psychedelic Painting I
Drawing
1968 (made)
1968 (made)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
This is one of a set of drawings and printed images in the V&A's collection by artist John Hurford. Hurford was one of the key figures in the explosion of psychedelic imagery in Britain in the late 1960s. His drawings, mainly executed in pen and ink and enlivened by brilliant washes of coloured inks, were reproduced as posters and illustrations in the leading Underground publications of the day, including Oz, IT and Gandalf's Garden.
Hurford's meticulously and minutely-particularised drawing style was coupled with his fascination with natural plant and tree forms. They gave his work a direct appeal to the hippy generation, who either aspired to get back to the simpler country life or who, as city-dwellers, nurtured a romanticised dream of rural existence.
Hurford's meticulously and minutely-particularised drawing style was coupled with his fascination with natural plant and tree forms. They gave his work a direct appeal to the hippy generation, who either aspired to get back to the simpler country life or who, as city-dwellers, nurtured a romanticised dream of rural existence.
Object details
Category | |
Object type | |
Title | Psychedelic Painting I (assigned by artist) |
Materials and techniques | Coloured inks and black Indian ink on paper. |
Brief description | Drawing with coloured inks, 'Psychedelic Painting I' by John Hurford, England, 1968. |
Physical description | Abstract image consisting of a woman's face surrounded by flowers, a female nude, and swirling patterns of water and landscape forms made of contrasting stripes of different colours and at the top a background of flames. The colours include green, pink, blue, orange, red, purple and yellow. To the left are (real?) Chinese or Japanese characters. |
Dimensions |
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Marks and inscriptions |
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Credit line | Given by the artist |
Summary | This is one of a set of drawings and printed images in the V&A's collection by artist John Hurford. Hurford was one of the key figures in the explosion of psychedelic imagery in Britain in the late 1960s. His drawings, mainly executed in pen and ink and enlivened by brilliant washes of coloured inks, were reproduced as posters and illustrations in the leading Underground publications of the day, including Oz, IT and Gandalf's Garden. Hurford's meticulously and minutely-particularised drawing style was coupled with his fascination with natural plant and tree forms. They gave his work a direct appeal to the hippy generation, who either aspired to get back to the simpler country life or who, as city-dwellers, nurtured a romanticised dream of rural existence. |
Collection | |
Accession number | E.369-2010 |
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Record created | February 1, 2011 |
Record URL |
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