About this artwork
Clough’s paintings of the late 1950s to early 1960s record the simplified forms of industrial scenes, reflecting the growing urbanisation and industrialisation of Britain at that time. She visited gasworks, cooling towers and chemical and electrical works, taking inspiration from the shapes and colours of the scenes. Clough’s work was becoming increasingly abstract, as seen in this painting, but it still retained a figurative basis. Although she has employed a limited range of colours, as is characteristic of her early work, the artist has created texture by scraping areas of the paint. The faint oval shapes in the vertical band at the centre of the painting recall electricity pylons.
Updated before 2020
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artist:Prunella CloughEnglish (1919 - 1999)
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title:Electrical Landscape
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date created:1960
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materials:Oil on canvas
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measurements:162.00 x 152.80 cm
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object type:
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credit line:Purchased 1976
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accession number:GMA 1535
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gallery:
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subject:
Prunella Clough
Prunella Clough
A painter, printmaker and draughtsman, Prunella Clough’s main subject was the urban and industrial landscape of Britain. Clough studied at Chelsea School of Art in London before working as a draughtsman during the Second World War, drawing charts and maps for the War Office. From the late 1940s to...