The Art of the Chalk Downs
Ravilious, Nash and Others
- Major new title on Ravilious, Nash, and their times
- Artists exploring some of Britain's best-loved landscapes
- Extensively illustrated, many lesser-known artworks
- Essay by leading expert James Russell
In the 1910s and 1920s the unique landscape of the chalk downs of southern England began to exert a new fascination on writers, historians, archaeologists and artists. Modernists such as Paul and John Nash, Eric Ravilious and William Nicholson immersed themselves in exploring these enigmatic, ancient places. The stark, rolling forms of the downs suited the modern aesthetic, offering a place where prehistory and modernity could converge.
With the growing political tensions of the 1930s, this modern engagement with ancient landscape took on a symbolism that still resonates. Images of Britain evolved as the downs became both symbols of wartime vulnerability and resilience and the site of machine gun emplacements and crashed aeroplanes.
Art of the Chalk Downs investigates this extraordinary collision of ancient and modern, idea and place, and the network of artists who worked and lived there. Seventy-five plates of paintings, watercolours, prints and photographs are accompanied by texts written by leading art historians James Russell and Stephens.
- Publisher
- Pallas Athene
- ISBN
- 9781843682943
- Publish date
- 14th Sep 2026
- Binding
- Hardback
- Territory
- World
- Size
- 205 mm x 255 mm
- Pages
- 176 Pages
- Illustrations
- 75 color, 10 b&w
Distributed by ACC Art Books
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