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  • Study of a Girl's Head, 1908 -
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     £3,800 



    Presentation: Framed
    SN: 3945
    Signed with monogram and dated, III 1908
    Coloured Chalks
    32 x 19 cm
    Provenance: Elizabeth Baker, the Artist's Niece; Peyton Skipwith

  • Matinee train, 1930 -
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     £3,500 



    Presentation: Mounted
    SN: 5314

    Signed and dated with monogram
    Inscribed with title on the right hand side margin
    Watercolour
    4 5/8 x 9 3/8 ins. (12 x 24 cm)

    Southall's output as a painter declined considerably with the outbreak of World War I, as the pacifism inherent in his Quaker faith led him to devote his energies to anti-war campaigning. His main artistic output during this period were anti-war cartoons printed in pamphlets and magazines, which number among his most powerful works.

    Post-war, with his reputation well established, Southall produced fewer of the epic (and time consuming) tempera works that made his critical name. Much of his life involved travel: favourite destinations included France, Italy, Fowey in Cornwall and Southwold in Suffolk, and these trips generally resulted in series of landscapes, often in watercolour.   The subject of Matinee train, though clearly observed by Southall, has yet to be identified. Possibly the fashionably dressed ladies, and single man,  seated in front of  lunch boxes (?) appear to be  at the long counter of a bar.   As they are still wearing coats it would appear they  are en route, rather than at, the  Matinee referred to in the title.

    We are grateful to George Breeze for assistance.

  • The Agate (Portrait of the Artist and his Wife), 1911 -
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    Presentation: Framed
    SN: 5147
    Signed with initials and dated 1911
    Tempera on linen
    38 3/4 x 19 3/16 ins. (98.4 x 48.8 cm)

    Provenance: Bt. Donald Hope at sale of the Estate of Mrs. A.E. Southall, Birmingham, 23 March, 1948, lot 44; bt. Richard Barrow, by descent.

    Exhibited: Liverpool, Autumn Exhbn., 1912, no. 736; Oldham, Spring Exhbn., 1913, no. 24; Manchester, Joseph Southall, 1922, no. 32.

    © estate of Joseph Edward Southall / National Portrait Gallery, London.

    The loan of this painting to the National Portrait Gallery has been arranged by Liss Fine Art.

  • Bacchus and Ariadne, circa 1912 -
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    Presentation: Framed
    SN: 582
    Watercolour over pencil on card, varnished;
    7 × 9½ in.(18 × 24.2 cm.)
    Provenance: Alan Fortunoff;The Fine Art Society
    Exhibited: Cheltenham Art Gallery and Museum, April–June 2005, no. 13
    Literature: John Christian, The Last Romantics, exh. cat., Barbican Art Gallery, London, 1989, p. 105, no. 73; Peyton Skipwith, Joseph Southall: Sixty Works from the Fortunoff Collection, exh. cat.,The Fine Art Society,
    London, 2005, p. 84

    ‘Southall’s tempera technique and flat decorative style give a curiously “frozen” quality to all his work, but the effect is particularly striking here where the subject is one of passionate eroticism. There are a number of other typical features: the somewhat awkward anatomy, the striped patterns on the draperies, the “chorus” figures at the upper right, and the white rabbits lower left’ (John Christian, The Last Romantics, exh. cat., Barbican Art Gallery, London, 1989, p.105).

    This is a quarter-size study for the tempera painting first exhibited at the 1913 Salon of the Societé National des Beaux-arts, Paris (see Joseph Southall 1861–1944:Artist–Craftsman, Birmingham 1980, p. 42, no. B10).

    The figure of Bacchus bears similarities to that in Tintoretto’s painting of Ariadne,Venus and Bacchus 1576 (Ducal Palace,Venice).
  • Five sketchbook sheets, circa 1916 -
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    Presentation: Unmounted
    SN: 2579
    Variously signed and inscribed:
    ‘Come Out of That’ – John Bull threatening the anti-conscriptionists
    ‘More Taxes for the Poor/ More Riches for the Rich’
    Appeal Tribunal 30.iii.1916 – J S Taylor, Pritchett and Geo. Ryder
    ‘To Fight against German Militarism’, London 10.iv.1916
    Sheet of Studies 22.vii.1916 – Geo. Lansbury, Hon Bertrand Russell and F.W. Jowett MP
    Pencil and watercolour
    4-1/2 × 6-3/4 in. (11.4 × 17.2 cm)
    Provenance: Estate of Mrs A.E. Southall; Mrs Elizabeth Baker ; Mr and Mrs Peyton Skipwith.

    Southall came from distinguished Quaker and Chartist stock, and was involved in radical politics in Birmingham from the mid-1890s. He was an ardent pacifist, serving for many years as Chairman of the Independent Labour Party, although he was expelled from the official Labour Party for supporting a Communist against Sir Austen Chamberlain. In one of his sketchbooks for 1913 he defined what he regarded as the three greatest evils threatening Europe at the time: ‘The military system, the factory system and the clerical system. ’With the advent of war in 1914 he set about fighting these through his art, denouncing jingoism, lampooning John Bull, and caricaturing the military as well as the tribunals set up to hear the cases of conscientious objectors. Many of these satirical cartoons were published in pamphlet form, the most famous being The Obliterator (1918), which sarcastically proclaimed that it was ‘supplied impartially to all civilised Governments and has given entire satisfaction. It is guaranteed to leave nothing standing and nothing breathing’. In addition to attacking the system through pen and pencil he attended many pacifist and other left-wing meetings, always with sketchbook to hand.Whilst participating in the debate, he would quietly observe and draw those with whom he shared the platform, as in the case of the present sheet with its neat studies of George Lansbury, Bertrand Russell and F.W. Jowett. Southall’s war was a war againstWar . (For an extended account of Southall’s political and pacifist views, see George Breeze, ‘Joseph Southall and the Pursuit of Peace’, in SixtyWorks by
    Joseph Southall, 1861–1944, exh. cat., Fortunoff Collection, Fine Art society, London, 2005.)

    We are grateful to Peyton Skipwith for the above catalogue note.
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