Artist Frank Brangwyn: Study of Dahlias, mid 1920s

Artist Frank Brangwyn (1867-1956): Study of Dahlias, mid 1920s

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Frank Brangwyn (1867-1956):
Study of Dahlias, mid 1920s
Framed (ref: 17)
Signed with monogram

Oil on canvas board, 13 1/2 x 16 1/2 in. (34.3 x 42 cm.)

See all works by Frank Brangwyn oil panel flowers



Provenance: Fine Art Society, 1952; Mrs Barton Chadwynd; private collection, Montevideo

Literature: Galloway Vincent, The Oils and Murals of Sir Frank Brangwyn, F Lewis, Leigh-on-Sea, 1962, p. 28, no. 159 Exhibited: Fine Art Society, October 1952 (31)

This painting shows a giant dahlia, a flower of South American origin. It is typical of the dense and richly coloured foliage that Brangwyn used to great effect in the murals he painted for the House of Lords in 1926. Brangwyn was a keen horticulturist: through his apprenticeship with William Morris he developed a love of traditional English flora; through his travels abroad he developed a love of the exotic. His garden at the Jointure in Ditchling, Sussex, combined the two. As a painter, Brangwyn responded to all forms of nature, making large numbers of spontaneous sketches on scraps of paper in response to the environment around him. This plein-air sketch is unusual for being in oil.


We are grateful to Dr Libby Horner for her assistance. The work is number O2512 in her forthcoming catalogue raisonné. Six other still lives with dahlias are recorded.