In the Park - Sylvan
About this artwork
Cadell joined the Royal Scots in 1915 and produced a series of drawings of army life before leaving for service in France. In 1916 about fifty of these drawings were exhibited, whilst twenty were published in a book entitled ‘Jack and Tommy’, which was sold to benefit the Red Cross. These witty, quickly executed images depict soldiers and sailors on duty and on leave. Their clean lines and flat colours anticipate the style of Cadell’s painting in the 1920s. Here, three soldiers are sitting in a park watching two women walk past. The soldiers are captured in a few swift lines denoting their uniform, with the central figure smoking a pipe.
Updated before 2020
-
artist:Francis Campbell Boileau CadellScottish (1883 - 1937)
-
title:In the Park - Sylvan
-
date created:1915
-
materials:Ink and watercolour on card
-
measurements:34.10 x 43.00 cm (mounted 50.80 x 63.50 cm; 54.60 x 67.30 cm)
-
object type:
-
credit line:Purchased 1994
-
accession number:GMA 3771
-
gallery:
-
subject:
Francis Campbell Boileau Cadell
Francis Campbell Boileau Cadell
Cadell studied in Paris and lived in Munich before settling in his native Edinburgh around 1909. Cadell's pre-war work is influenced by the Impressionists. From around 1920, his work became brighter and bolder. Shadows were suppressed to such an extent that the paintings of this period are...