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Ben Nicholson
Ben Nicholson OM, (April 10, 1894 - February 6,
1982), British abstract painter, was born in Denham, Buckinghamshire.
Nicholson was educated at Gresham's School in Holt, Norfolk. His
father was the painter Sir William Nicholson, and his sister Nancy
Nicholson. The family moved to London in 1896.
He travelled to New York in 1917 for an operation on his tonsils,
then visited other American cities, returning to England in 1918.
From 1920 to 1938 he was married to the painter Winifred Nicholson
and lived in London. After his first exhibition of figurative works
in London in 1922, his work began to be influenced by Synthetic
Cubism, and later by the primitive style of Rousseau. In London,
Nicholson met the sculptors Barbara Hepworth (to whom he was married
from 1933 to 1951) and Henry Moore. On visits to Paris he met Mondrian,
whose work in the neoplastic style was to influence him in an abstract
direction, and Picasso, whose cubism would also find its way into
his work. His gift, however, was the ability to incorporate these
European trends into a new style that was recognizably his own.
He first visited St. Ives, Cornwall in 1928, where he met the fisherman
and painter Alfred Wallis. In Paris in 1933 he made his first wood
relief, White Relief, which contained only right angles and circles.
In 1937 he was one of the editors of Circle, an influential monograph
on constructivism. He believed that abstract art should be enjoyed
by the general public, as shown by the Nicholson Wall, a mural he
created for the garden of Sutton Place in Guildford, Surrey. In
1943 he joined the St. Ives Society of Artists. A retrospective
exhibition of his work was shown at the Tate Gallery in London in
1955.
Nicholson married the photographer Felicitas Vogler in 1957 and
moved to Castagnola, Switzerland, in 1958. In 1968 he received the
British Order of Merit (OM). In 1971 he separated from Vogler and
moved to Cambridge. In 1977 he divorced. He died in London and was
cremated at Golders Green cemetery.
Some of Nicholson's works can be seen at the Tate St Ives gallery,
and at Kettle's Yard Art Gallery in Cambridge.
The paintings are the excellent portrayal of the events and scenes
that we see around us. The painters are the best cameras of the
world. They reproduce many different types of pictures. They even
draw imaginary pictures that do not exist in this world. We tend
to use both thinned oil paints and dense oil paints. Masterpieces
can be dyed more than once, but each time it may be different from
the existing paintings.h
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