The stacker - 1925


Size (cm): 60x75
Price:
Sale price¥42,300 JPY

Description

The painting The stackor (The Stackyard) of 1925, the work of the British Paul Nash, is an eloquent testimony of the author's artistic evolution and his particular landscape vision. Known mainly for his work as a war and surreal landscape painter, Nash achieves in this work to capture the stillness and timelessness of the English field in a way that only he could do.

In a first look, the composition of "the stacker" is notable for its orderly and geometric structure. When observing carefully, one can discern the meticulous and almost architectural disposition of the visual elements. The field, represented here with the vibrant exuberance that could be expected, but with an almost ghostly placidity, remains the backdrop of a series of hay batteries that seem carefully stacked, forming a pattern that evokes both order and a soft desolation .

The colors in the work are sober and moderate, predominantly the earth and green tones that contribute to the melancholic and reflective atmosphere. The use of color by NASH is exceptionally controlled, transmitting a sensation of calm and permeability that is almost poetic. This restricted palette not only reinforces the tranquility of the country landscape, but also underlines a certain ethereal and abstract quality that Paul Nash knew how to combine so brilliantly in his work.

Although there are no visible human figures in the painting, His presence feels implicitly. Hoe batteries tell us about past human activity, alluding to invisible hands that have worked and shift the landscape. This emptiness of the direct human figure is a resource that Nash uses with a mastery, inviting the viewer to contemplate human nature and intervention in a silent balance.

While the praise towards Nash usually focus on their representations of the horrors of World War I or in their surreal landscapes of the following decades, the stacker is a work that reminds us of his deep love for the British landscape and his ability to Provide the most everyday machinery and human tasks.

The 1920s marked a transition period for Nash, moving away from war images towards more personal and bucolic explorations. The stacker can be seen as part of this body of work, where the artist is given the task of finding beauty and serene presence in the quietest corners of rural life. The work is halfway between the semi-realistic representations of its youth and the abstract and surreal explorations that will come later.

In conclusion, Paul Nash's stackor is not only a painting of a country landscape, but a visual meditation on the relationship between nature and human activity, expressed through a sagaz composition and a masterful use of color. This work is a window to Nash's artistic transition and a sublime representation of its ability to instill meaning and emotion in each stroke, in each hay stack, in each fragment of the landscape.

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