John Swarbrooke Fine Art is delighted to return to the British Art Fair (Stand 50) from 25-28 September (Preview 25 September)

The curated exhibition will include paintings and works on paper by pioneering 20th-century artists such as Roger Fry, Gwen John, John Nash and Christopher Wood.

The gallery will also participate in Unsung, an exhibition at the fair curated by Colin Gleadell which highlights modern British artists whose work has been overlooked. Included is a self portrait by Denton Welch (1915-1948) ahead of the gallery’s solo exhibition of his work in October.

To enquire about an artwork or request fair tickets please email art@johnswarbrooke.com.

Gerald Mackenzie LEET (1913-1998)

Portrait of Denton Welch, 1935

signed upper left Gerald Leet
oil on canvas
71 x 91.5 cm. (28 x 36 in.)

Provenance:
Denton Welch; and thence by descent.
Private Collection, UK.

Literature:
The Exhibition of the Royal Academy of Arts MCMXXXV (London, 1935), p. 51, no. 786.

‘LET ME HAVE MY SHOES, PLEASE. I WANT TO GO HOME’, Punch, 15 May 1935, p. 575.
J. Methuen Campbell, Denton Welch: Writer and Artist, London, 2002, p. 107 (illus. in colour; also on frontispiece).

Exhibited:
London, The Royal Academy of Arts, The Exhibition of the Royal Academy of Arts MCMXXXV, Summer 1935, no. 786.

Born in Shanghai in 1915 to a British-American family, Denton studied art at Goldsmiths’ in London from 1933 to 1935. It was there that he became friends with Gerald Mackenzie Leet, the painter of the present portrait, who would go on to be a companion throughout the trials of Denton’s tragically short life. The portrait shows Denton reposed on a patterned blanket in a mustard-yellow roll-neck, his eyes engaging the viewer directly - one in the light, the other in shadow. The day bed is reflected beyond in a mirror, where the blanket takes on a pinkish tone. The effect is to envelop Denton in an intimate setting, a feeling heightened by his bare feet and the book in his hand.

£45,000 + ARR

Wilhelmina BARNS-GRAHAM CBE (1912-2004)

Gurnard's Head, Winter, 1949

signed and dated lower right W Barns Graham 1949; signed, inscribed and dated on the verso Gurnards Head, (Winter)/W Barns Graham 1949
ink, watercolour, gouache and coloured chalk on paper
24.7 x 44.4 cm. (9¾ x 17½ in.)

Provenance:
Gordon Hepworth Fine Art, Exeter.
with Belgrave Gallery, London.
Anonymous sale; Christie's, South Kensington, 13 June 1997, lot 392.
Porthmeor Gallery, St Ives.
Lord Myners (Former Chairman of the Trustees of Tate).
His estate sale; Christie’s, London, 17 Oct. 2024, lot 102.
Private Collection, UK.

Exhibited:
St Ives, Castle Inn, St Ives Society of Artists: Winter Collection, January 1949.
Penzance, Scottish Arts Council, Newlyn Art Gallery, Wilhelmina Barns-Graham: Retrospective 1940-1989, June - July 1989, no. 11; this exhibition travelled to Edinburgh, City Art Centre, October - November 1989; Perth, Museum and Art Gallery, December 1989 - January 1990; St Andrews, Crawford Art Centre, January - February 1990; and Ayr, Maclaurin Art Gallery, May 1990.

£36,000 + ARR

Roger FRY (1866-1934)

Portrait of Aldous Huxley, c. 1931

signed lower left Roger Fry
oil on canvas
42 x 31.4 cm. (12¼ x 16½ in.)

Provenance:
Private collection, U.K.
Philip Mould & Company, London, 2017, acquired from the above.
Private collection, U.K., acquired from the above;
Their estate sale; Warrington and Northwich Auctions, 4 February 2025, lot 2044.
Private Collection, UK.

Literature:
Frances Spalding, (1999) Roger Fry Art and Life, Berkeley and California, p. 252.

The present work was painted over a period of several months at the end of 1931, the year in which Aldous Huxley (1894-1963) wrote his seminal work, Brave New World, which brought him international acclaim.

Aldous Huxley first became affiliated with the Bloomsbury Group during the First World War, while working as a farm labourer at Garsington Manor, the home of Lady Ottoline Morrell (1873-1938). The similarity between the present work and that of the same sitter by Vanessa Bell in the National Portrait Gallery suggests that they were both painted during the same sitting, with the two artists working side by side.

Sold

Duncan GRANT (1885-1978)

Design for Roundel

pencil and watercolour
46.5 x 46.5 cm. (18¼ x 18¼ in.)

Provenance:
Robert Kime.
His estate sale; Dreweatts, Newbury, 4 Oct. 2023, lot 103.
Private Collection, London.

Grant's interest in the decorative arts began very early in his career and became an integral part of his artistic output. In 1913, he co-founded The Omega Workshops along with Roger Fry and Vanessa Bell with the aim of breaking down the barriers between so-called fine and decorative art and bringing art into everyday life. So began Grant's long association with design and decoration. As well as fuelling the imagination, Omega provided an alternative source of income for many artists of the day, particularly fellow members of the Bloomsbury Group, including Virginia Woolf, Clive Bell and Ethel Sands. Omega produced a wide range individually designed and produced items ranging from furniture, ceramics, murals, stained glass and textiles.

£11,500

Roger FRY (1866-1934)

Dancers, c. 1910

oil on board
71.1 x 55.9 cm. (28 x 22 in.)

Provenance:
Lady Ottoline Morrell;
Sotheby’s, London, 19 Nov. 1980, lot 116;
Christie’s, London, 13 Nov. 1987, lot 245;
Sandra Lummis Fine Art, London;
Bernard Kelly, Nov. 1987.
His estate sale; Lyon & Turnbull, London, 15 Jan. 2025, lot 219.
Private Collection.

Dancers is an early modernist painting made at the advent of Post-Impressionist art in Britain. Roger Fry distinguished himself as both an intellectual and a painter, and these two activities were inseparably connected throughout his life. This work was painted around the time that Fry curated the fêted exhibition Manet and the Post-Impressionists, held at the Grafton Galleries in London, which provoked a public outcry and created a new taxonomy of modernist painting. Having previously worked in a temperate, well-constructed style of naturalistic painting informed by his deep familiarity with old master painting from Giotto to Rembrandt, Fry’s style began to change following his first exposure to Cezanne in 1906. His painting Dancers uses an eclectic mixture of avant-garde tropes—in its radical simplification of detail, its irreverent subject-matter, its flamboyant palette of pure colour—and the traditions of history painting – in its multi-figure composition, its historicist costumes, its allusions to myth or ritual.

Dancers may be construed as Fry’s attempt to develop a new form of painting inspired partly by the art of Henri Matisse. Matisse’s masterpiece La Danse was exhibited at the Salon d’Automne in Paris in autumn 1910, shortly before Manet and the Post-Impressionists opened in November that year. Fry later included it in the Second Post-Impressionist Exhibition, a sequel that was also held at the Grafton Galleries.[1] The interlocking chains of naked, sensual figures have an immediate, superficial similarity to the subject of Fry’s painting. Fry’s admiration for Matisse is evident from his selection for the two Post-Impressionist exhibitions: two landscape paintings, nine sculptures and twelve drawings by Matisse were included in Manet and the Post-Impressionists, some of which were borrowed from the artist directly; as many as forty works by Matisse were included in the Second Post-Impressionist Exhibition. The execution of Dancers also strongly suggests an interpretation of Matisse. The paint was applied with flat touches in sharply defined, contrasting areas of colour. The emphasis was upon producing a decorative, uniform surface, rather than the modelling of figures or painterly structure. Fry wrote of Matisse in the catalogue for the Second Post Impressionist Exhibition: ‘In opposition to Picasso, who is pre-eminently plastic, Matisse aims at convincing us of the reality of his forms by the continuity and flow of rhythmic line, by the logic of his space relations, and, above all, by an entirely new use of colour.’[2] Fry’s analysis of Matisse’s work and his own painting experiment in Dancers suggest a conscious effort to develop his own original, modernist style with Matisse as a point of departure.

This painting was first owned by the charismatic arts patron Lady Ottoline Morrell. She was initiated into avant-garde painting by Augustus John, whose work she bought and with whom she had an unusual romance. She first met Roger Fry in 1909. Writing that year to the keeper of the Tate Gallery, D. S. MacColl, Fry said: ‘She has been very good to me and has a real feeling for art.’[4] They were both central to the establishment of the Contemporary Art Society in 1910, and Lady Ottoline acted as the Society’s buyer in its early years. In February 1911, Fry painted Lady Ottoline’s portrait at Peppard, her house near Henley-on Thames. Their friendship intensified and, when Fry paid a visit to her home in Bedford Square in March 1911, they had a sexual encounter. Fry wrote to her afterwards: ‘I’m still all amazed and wondering … can’t begin to think—I can only know how beautiful it was of you, how splendid—[…] it was altogether beautiful and right.’[5] By May that year, Fry had taken against Lady Ottoline and a lasting enmity was established between them; he believed that she had spread a rumour that he was in love with her.[6] It seems likely that Fry’s painting Dancers was purchased by Lady Ottoline sometime before their quarrel in May 1911. It remained in her possession, part of a significant collection of modern British pictures, and was sold by her descendants through Sotheby’s in 1980.

£85,000

John NASH CBE RA (1893-1977)

The Roach Pool at Wiston, Suffolk

signed lower left John Nash
watercolour, pencil and coloured pencil on paper
33.5 x 48 cm. (13¼ x 18⅞ in.)

Provenance:
Sale; Bonhams, Knightsbridge, 22 Jan. 2008, lot 108.
Private Collection, U.K.
Sale; Bonham’s, Knightsbridge, 29 Nov. 2023, lot 2.
Private Collection, UK.

£11,000 + ARR

Henri GAUDIER-BRZESKA (1891 – 1915)

Owl

pen and ink on paper
34.5 x 27.5 cm. (13 9/16 x 10 13/16 in.)

Provenance:

The artist Barry Flanagan (b. 1941).
Private Collection.
Anon. sale; Bonham’s Knightsbridge, 29 Nov. 2023, lot 165.
Private Collection, acquired at the above sale.

£6,500

Christopher WOOD (1901-1930)

A Side Show Performance at Luna Park, Paris, 1930
ink, pastel and watercolour on paper
33 x 44.5 cm. (13 x 17½ in.)

Provenance:
Mercury Gallery, London, 1979;
Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas Fewtrell, UK (acquired from the above), until 2017.
Private Collection, UK.

This enigmatic work is by Christopher Wood, one of the most celebrated yet tragic artists of the 20th Century.

In late-1929 Wood was commissioned by Boris Kochno (1904-1990) to design the set for a new ballet he was producing. Kochno had recently assumed creative control of the Ballet Russes on the death of Serge Diaghilev (1872-1929), and his new ballet, ‘Luna Park’ or ‘The Freaks’, was to be debuted at the 1930 Cochran Revue at the London Pavilion. The performance was set at Luna Park, a real-life amusement attraction near Porte Maillot in Paris, and tells the story of a group of circus ‘freaks’ – including a six-armed man and one-legged ballerina - who rebel against the ringmaster when he is off-stage.

The present work depicts a wrestling match and is one of a small number of drawings and watercolours painted in preparation for the prestigious Luna Park commission. It was painted at the amusement park in Paris from which the ballet took its inspiration - presumably in the famous sports arena which would often host high-profile boxing matches. As the opponent in black enters the ring, the ringmaster – who may also be one of the circus ‘strongmen’ - addresses the spectators in the bottom left, who Wood depicts in his characteristically shrewd, direct manner. The other spectators, however, are treated in an altogether more sympathetic way – especially the young men who all cut fine figures with strong, angular jawlines and delicate facial features. It is remarkable example of Wood’s ability to capture a broad range of human character and emotion in a limited palette, and like many of his works at this date, has a harmonious but inexplicably uncomfortable composition.

£18,500

Gwen JOHN (1876-1939)

Portrait of Auguste Rodin

studio stamped lower right Gwen John
pencil on grey paper
17.6 x 15.7 cm. (7 x 6¼ in.)

Provenance:
Anthony D'Offay, London.
Private Collection.

£6,800

Duncan GRANT (1885-1978)

Harp Player, c. 1930

signed lower left DG
ink on paper
19 x 15 cm. (7½ x 5¾ in.)

Provenance:
The Bloomsbury Workshop, London.
Private Collection.

Sold

Henry Scott Tuke, RA, RWS (British, 1858-1929)

A Venetian gondola
signed with initials and dated lower left H.S.T. 1899
watercolour on paper
10.5 x 13.5cm (4 1/8 x 5 5/16in).

Provenance:
B. C. Sarginson.
Brian D. Price, purchased on 27 March 1983 (R315).
Sale; Bonham’s, 27 Sept. 2023, lot 91.

Exhibited:
Falmouth, Royal Cornwall Polytechnic Society, no. A502.

Literature:
David Wainwright & Catherine Dinn, Henry Scott Tuke 1858–1929: Under Canvas, London, 1989, p. 82, no. 59 (illus.)

Sold

Gerald Mackenzie LEET (1913-1998)

Figures and Dirigible in an Icy Landscape

signed lower right Gerald Mackenzie Leet
gouache, pen and pencil on paper
30.5 x 37 cm. (12 x 14.6 in.)

£1,750