When war broke out in 1914, Fergusson and his wife, the dancer Margaret Morris Fergusson, left their home in France and settled in London. They returned to Paris in 1925, the year in which the present picture was painted. Despite its almost Mediterranean quality, 'The Log Cabin' seems to have been painted in England shortly before their return.
John Duncan Fergusson (Scottish, 1874 - 1961)
`Scottish Colourist? John Duncan Fergusson is recognised as one of the most influential Scottish painters of the 20th century. Mostly self-taught, he moved to Paris in 1907, where he became a member of the Parisian art circles to which artists such as Matisse and Picasso also belonged. The outbreak of the First World War forced him to return to Britain, and by 1918 he was an established member of the art scene in Chelsea, London. In 1929 he went back to Paris for a further eleven years before moving to Glasgow, where he lived until his death. Like his friend S J Peploe, Fergusson?s early work was influenced by that of Whistler and the Glasgow Boys, but in France he came across Fauvism and adopted a similar style, using pure, bright colours and bold, rhythmic contours.