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Artworks
Walter Sickert
Jack Ashore, 1912/13, c.Pen and ink and charcoal with white heightening on laid paper34.5 x 25.5 cm
13 5/8 x 10 inCopyright The ArtistBetween 1910 and 1914, Sickert made many two-figure genre scenes in Camden Town that are among his best-known work. Several including Ennui and Jack Ashore were studied from life in...Between 1910 and 1914, Sickert made many two-figure genre scenes in Camden Town that are among his best-known work. Several including Ennui and Jack Ashore were studied from life in his room—a first-floor front—on the corner of Granby Street and the Hampstead Road. He referred to this address as Wellington House Academy after a school that operated from the premises in the early nineteenth century. Charles Dickens had been a day scholar there and based some of David Copperfield on his experiences at the school, which fired Sickert’s interest.
The title and subject of Jack Ashore evoke the shore leave of a sailor seeking female company. Like Ennui, Jack Ashore depicts Marie Hayes and Hubby. The composition was studied in this work and four other drawings, the scale of which are uniform without exception—roughly 35 by 25 centimetres or 14 by 10 inches—and these dimensions are 1:1 scale with both the large etching plate and the sole related painting, which were made around the same time. None of the drawings are squared for transfer and the replication of the composition was likely achieved by tracing. The related painting (Pallant House Gallery, Chichester) is not an exact scale replica of the drawings, however, as the subject was enlarged: the man’s head and the woman’s foot are cropped and details of the surroundings are omitted.
This drawing was made using a variety of graphic media. Sickert apparently began by making a drawing in black chalk. He then overworked it with pen and sepia ink. The pen lines were mostly applied in uniform diagonal hatching, which enhances the underlying distribution of shadow and half-tones. A touch of white heightening creates a gleam at the surface of the dressing-table mirror, which appears in several other pictures of Wellington House Academy.Provenance
Dr Robert Emmons
At Christie's, London, 7 March 1986, lot 206
At Sotheby's, London, 4 Nov. 1992, lot 22
Ruth and Joseph Bromberg
The Fine Art Society, London, 2004
The Herbert and Ann Lucas Collection, Los Angeles, May 2004Exhibitions
London, Leicester Galleries, Paintings and Drawings by W. R. Sickert from the Collection of Dr Robert Emmons, May – June 1950, cat. no. 32
London, The Fine Art Society, The Ruth and Joseph Bromberg Collection of Sickert Prints and Drawings, 21 Sept. – 21 Oct. 2004, cat. no. 69
London, Piano Nobile, Sickert: Love, Death & Ennui. The Herbert and Ann Lucas Collection, 26 Sept. – 19 Dec. 2025, no. 43
Literature
Robert Emmons, The Life and Opinions of Walter Richard Sickert, Faber & Faber, 1941, opp. p. 146 (illus.)
Anthony Bertram, Sickert, The Studio Publications, 1955, pl. 24 (illus.)
Wendy Baron and Richard Shone, Sickert Paintings, exh. cat., Royal Academy of Arts, 1992, p. 222, fig. 159 (illus.)
Anna Gruetzner Robins, Walter Sickert: Drawings: Theory and Practice, Word and Image, Scolar Press, 1996, p. 79, fig. 53 (illus.)
Ruth Bromberg, Walter Sickert: Prints: A Catalogue Raisonné, Yale University Press, 2000, cat. no. 151a, pp. 170–172 (illus.)
The Ruth and Joseph Bromberg Collection of Sickert Prints and Drawings, exh. cat., The Fine Art Society, 2004, cat. no. 69, pp. 62–63 (col. illus.)
Wendy Baron, Sickert: Paintings and Drawings, Yale University Press, 2006, cat. no. 400.1, p. 399
Lou Klepac, Walter Sickert: Drawings. The Painter's Eye, The Beagle Press, 2022, p. 162 (illus.)
Kate Aspinall, Luke Farey and Stuart Lucas, Sickert: Love, Death & Ennui. The Herbert and Ann Lucas Collection, exh. cat., Piano Nobile, 2025, no. 43, pp. 92–93 (col. illus.)1of 2