Cedric Morris occupies a distinctive position within twentieth-century British art, standing somewhat apart from the dominant movements of his generation. He was an extraordinarily accomplished painter of the natural world, best known for his depictions of flowers, plants and landscapes. Boswednack, Cornwall, publicly exhibited in 1932, belongs to an important phase in Morris’s early landscape practice.
The painting was likely made during a visit to Cornwall in the early 1930s. Morris’s continuing interest in the region is demonstrated by his solo exhibition at The Leicester Galleries in April 1932, in which Boswednack, Cornwall was exhibited alongside five other Cornish subjects [fig. 1]. Boswednack is situated in the parish of Zennor, on the north coast of the Penwith peninsula. The area later became closely associated with a number of major figures in twentieth-century British art, including Barbara Hepworth, Ben Nicholson and Bernard Leach. Morris and Arthur Lett-Haines, however, were active in Cornwall before the later prominence of the St Ives School....
Cedric Morris occupies a distinctive position within twentieth-century British art, standing somewhat apart from the dominant movements of his generation. He was an extraordinarily accomplished painter of the natural world, best known for his depictions of flowers, plants and landscapes. Boswednack, Cornwall, publicly exhibited in 1932, belongs to an important phase in Morris’s early landscape practice.
The painting was likely made during a visit to Cornwall in the early 1930s. Morris’s continuing interest in the region is demonstrated by his solo exhibition at The Leicester Galleries in April 1932, in which Boswednack, Cornwall was exhibited alongside five other Cornish subjects [fig. 1]. Boswednack is situated in the parish of Zennor, on the north coast of the Penwith peninsula. The area later became closely associated with a number of major figures in twentieth-century British art, including Barbara Hepworth, Ben Nicholson and Bernard Leach. Morris and Arthur Lett-Haines, however, were active in Cornwall before the later prominence of the St Ives School. Their relationship to the region therefore belongs to an earlier phase of modernist activity in west Cornwall. Lucian Freud’s later recollection that Morris was known in these years as ‘the Cézanne of Newlyn’ is suggestive in this respect, pointing to the artist’s interest in the organisation of form and avant-garde perspective planes.[1]
The painting’s effect depends largely on Morris’s handling of texture and spatial compression. The stone buildings are arranged within a shallow pictorial field, limiting conventional recession and emphasising the interlocking geometry of the scene. The vertical mass of the central building is balanced by the lower, angular forms of the cottages to either side, while the foreground wall establishes a strong horizontal counterpoint. These elements are described through thick, uneven applications of paint, giving the surface a pronounced physical presence.
[1] Richard Morphet, (1984) Cedric Morris. London: Tate Gallery, p.21.