Birne, Eleanor. “At Dulwich Picture Gallery”. London Review of Books, No. 17, p. 37.
Christopher Richard Wynne Nevinson
Standard Name: Nevinson, Christopher Richard Wynne
Used Form: C. R. W. Nevinson
Connections
Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Education | Dora Carrington | Critic Jane Hill
notes that though Carrington entered the Slade at a remarkable period in its own history (Henry Tonks
called it a second, and last, crisis of brilliance) |
Family and Intimate relationships | Dora Carrington | The two met at the Slade
and their relationship was for Carrington mainly concerned with painting. Hill, Jane, and Michael Holroyd. The Art of Dora Carrington. Herbert Press, 1994. 19, 21, 25 |
Textual Features | Pat Barker | The story begins with the ambitions and emotional entanglements of a small group of Slade School of Art
students (two men, Paul Tarrant and the precocious success Kit Neville, and one strikingly talented woman, Elinor... |
Timeline
February 1916
Painter C. R. W. Nevinson
scored a great success with his first one-man show, at the Leicester Galleries in London, of paintings expressive of the dehumanised violence of modern warfare.
March 1918
The second exhibition of C. R. W. Nevinson
, now an Official War Artist, included a painting of dead British soldiers lying amid mud and barbed wire, entitled Paths of Glory, which the censor banned.