Original abstract expressionist oil painting, framed
Vertical Log by David Holt (April 1972)
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Printing Details
Painted in April 1972, this is an oil on board in a wooden frame (but not glazed). The frame measures 44 × 86cm and the painting is 40.5 × 83cm.
This is a work of abstract expressionism. It was one of a series of paintings inspired by fallen and chopped logs, this being one of the larger paintings. This one shows a trunk with one large branch swan off and a smaller one towards the top of the painting also removed, and the gradiated colours of tree, bark and wood running across the log, and the tree's rings visible where cut.
Signed and dated lower right, and title in pencil to the reverse.
David Holt (1928–2014). Born in Hythe, Kent. Painter and Lecturer in Art. After National Service, he trained at the Canterbury School of Art, the Hammersmith School of Art and the Royal Academy Schools where he was awarded a medal for drawing and the Knapping Prize. He joined a studio-workshop with Gerald Holtom (designer of the CND symbol) in 1958 where he designed and produced proscenium curtains for schools. In 1958 he was awarded a Harkness Fellowship and travelled across America, producing many drawings and prints of the Pueblo Indians and their life-dance in Santa Fe in New Mexico, where he also worked with artist Agnes Sims. He returned to England in 1960 and continued to paint and work on large textile appliques for schools, churches, and private houses including Spade House in Kent, the former home of H G Wells.
He was made a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts in 1962, and in 1964 was commissioned to design and make a large textile applique 'Christ in Majesty' which still hangs in the chapel of Christ Church College in Canterbury.
He was Head of Art at Canterbury Christ Church University until his retirement in 1995. He exhibited widely in the UK and the States and worked with many art societies and summer schools across East Kent.
His work can be found in both private and public collections throughout the UK and America, including the Yale Centre for British Art. His painting "Coastal Watcher" was recently used for the dustwrapper on Modernism and Memory: Rhoda Pritzker and the Art of Collecting (Yale University Press, 2016).
Condition
This painting is in very good condition. There is some light wear and discoloration to the frame, but the painting remains in good order. An impressively sized original abstract painting.