Tirzah Garwood, The Photographer, c. 1947
The Dulwich Picture Gallery's current exhibition is a Tirzah Garwood, covering her early woodcuts, marbled papers, box-frame collages and slightly surreal oil paintings like this one, The Photographer. The trees here are represented by leaf prints: 'using a method favoured by Victorian botanists, Garwood covered one side of a leaf with ink and then pressed it onto paper, creating a strange miniature tree.' The subject was inspired by some Edwardian family photographs found by Henry Swanzy, who had become her second husband in 1946 (as a key figure in encouraging post-war Caribbean and African literature he is almost as interesting as her first husband, Eric Ravilious). Sadly they only had a brief time together - her cancer returned in 1948 and she died in 1951.
Tirzah Garwood, Etna, 1944
Garwood clearly enjoyed playing with scale and creating artificial landscapes - an earlier painting shows toys (that for a moment look real) in a garden, so that the foliage surrounding them seems unnaturally large. It reminded me of oddities I've written about here before, like Carl Wilhelm Kolbe's Kräuterblätter scenes featuring over-sized plant life, or the botanical illustrations of Gherardo Cino that blow up herbs to the size of trees. In Etna she depicts Mount Caburn in Sussex with a toy train and 'cornstalks and wildflowers that seem to dwarf the chickens pecking alongside the railway line.' In the exhibition catalogue James Russell writes that the hill in this painting 'is dependably solid, modelled in a different medium but with a similar feeling for mass to The Westbury Horse, one of her late husband's career-defining pre-war watercolours that she had with her still.
Perhaps she referred to it as she worked; perhaps she was even responding to it, but also in her own way transforming the Sussex countryside into a landscape from a dream.'
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