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Walberswick
and the Blyth Valley have attracted artists for nearly two centuries.
The visits of PHILIP WILSON STEER and CHARLES RENNIE MACKINTOSH
are now common knowledge, but a great many other major artists worked
in the area.
Blythburgh,
too, had its artist residents: ERNEST CROFTS RA, SIR JOHN SEYMOUR
LUCAS RA, and WILLIAM BENNER all had homes in the village.
In the early
nineteenth century CORNELIUS VARLEY and PETER DE WINT, both prominent
water-colourists, made studies of Walberswick church, while in the
1860s and 1870s CHARLES KEENE, very highly regarded in his day,
produced drawings and etchings of riverside subjects.
The mid-1880s
saw a substantial influx of young artists, mainly Paris-trained,
who later became very prominent: many had also spent time in the
burgeoning artist colonies in Brittany and Cornwall. Perhaps the
best-known of the 'new wave' was Steer, but other notable visitors
of the period included FREDERICK BROWN, Slade Professor for many
years; SIR FRANK SHORT, Head of the School of Engraving at the RCA,
and the Irish Academicians WALTER OSBORNE, NATHANIEL HILL and AUGUSTUS
BURKE.
Blythburgh Society
- The History Notes: The Walberswick Enigma. Artists inspired by
the Blyth Estuary
Between the
wars the arrival of distinguished artists continued unabated. These
included Royal Academicians SIR ARNESBY BROWN, SIR GEORGE CLAUSEN,
R. O. DUNLOP and BERTRAM PRIESTMAN. More permanently domiciled in
the village were W. F. CRITTALL, ALLAN DAVIDSON and TOM VAN OSS.
Since World
War 2, artists with homes in Walberswick have included CLIFFORD
RUSSELL, ERIC SCOTT, CHRIS and WENDY SINCLAIR, SIDNEY SEYMOUR LUCAS
and WILLIAM BOWYER RA, while visitors have included BERNARD DUNSTAN
RA, SIR WILLIAM COLDSTREAM and F. W. BALDWIN. These are merely the
tip of a huge iceberg - the list seems endless.
The attraction
defies clear analysis, but must involve elemental considerations:
water, air, light and space, combined with a compellingly haunting
atmosphere.
R. R. Scott, Walberswick, October 1995
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