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Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Ben Nicholson, March 1964 (Carlisle jug), 1964

Ben Nicholson

March 1964 (Carlisle jug), 1964
Pencil and oil wash on paper
35.5 x 31.8 cm
14 x 12 1/2 in
 
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Speaking to the art critic John Russell in 1963 for an interview published in The Sunday Times, Nicholson explained the origins of his still-life work in the collecting habits of his father, the painter William Nicholson. But of course I owe a lot to my father – especially his poetic idea and to his still-life theme. That didn’t come from cubism, as some people think, but from my father – not only from what he did as a painter but from the very beautiful striped and spotted jugs and mugs and goblets and octagonal and hexagonal glass objects which he collected. Having those things throughout the house was an unforgettable early experience for me. Like his father, Ben Nicholson maintained a collection of ceramic and glass vessels all through his life, and they provided him with a continual flush of pleasure and artistic inspiration. Carlisle was a centre of ceramic production from the eighteenth until the early twentieth century. This undecorated jug appears to be an eighteenth-century ware, probably of stoneware or cream-glazed earthenware. It is unclear whether the jug is in fact from Carlisle, and the curved handle and pointed spout might indicate any number of production centres including Lowestoft and Sunderland. The paper which Nicholson used for works like March 1964 (Carlisle jug) was always pre-prepared in batches. He washed individual pieces with areas of watercolour, without any regard for what might later be depicted on the sheet. From the 1960s, he routinely started shaping the paper, creating irregular rectangles and sheets with rounded sides. Once a subject or a view was decided upon Nicholson would search his collection of sheets, washed in different ways and cut in different shapes, to find a piece of paper that suited the immediate needs of the work at hand. This well-practiced method ensured a certain richness of quality and often resulted in unexpected, enlivening contrasts between the subtle watercolour wash and the line drawing which followed it.
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Provenance

With André Emmerich Gallery, New York
With Annandale Gallery, Sydney
With Bernard Jacobson, London

Exhibitions

1965, New York, André Emmerich Gallery, Ben Nicholson 1955-1965, April 1965, cat. no. 132
2008, London, Austin Desmond Fine Art, The Thing Observed: Ben Nicholson, Victor Pasmore, 2008, cat. no. 3
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