About this artwork
This work, dating from 1950, when Hill was just twenty, displays the cubist influence of Juan Gris alongside aspects of Victor Pasmore’s early abstract compositions with connected segments of circles, triangles and rectangles. Hill has wittily found these forms in the wrappers of Pears soap bars. This idea of Dada appropriation of found materials remained important to him and, significantly, in 1951 he began to correspond with Marcel Duchamp. Hill has always maintained that Dada and Constructivism are closely related. He particularly admired Duchamp’s formal innovations – his renunciation of oil paint and his use of industrial materials, ideas which would become identifiable in Hill’s later work.
Updated before 2020
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artist:Anthony HillEnglish (1930 - 2020)
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title:Untitled
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date created:1950
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materials:Oil and collage with black chalk on canvas
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measurements:52.70 x 36.40 cm
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object type:
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credit line:Bequeathed by Mr Ken Powell 2006 [received 2008]
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accession number:GMA 5054
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gallery:
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subject:
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artwork photographed by:Antonia Reeve
Anthony Hill
Anthony Hill
Hill’s work has never been figurative - from the outset he was interested in abstraction and Constructivism. He spent two years at St Martin’s School of Art before switching to the Central School in 1949. In 1951 he began corresponding with several artists, including Duchamp, who had a profound...