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SHOP Norman Cornish: A Shot Against Time
Shot Against Time SQUARE.jpg Image 1 of
Shot Against Time SQUARE.jpg
Shot Against Time SQUARE.jpg

Norman Cornish: A Shot Against Time

£20.00
sold out

Softback, 160 pages
Edited by Mara-Helen Wood, with essays by William Feaver, William Varley, Michael Chaplin and Dr Gail-Nina Anderson
134 full colour illustrations
235 x 197mm, ISBN 9780947940218

Norman Cornish 1919 – 2014, set himself the task of recording what it was like to live in Spennymoor, a small mining town in north east England in the middle of the 20th century. He had little interest in anywhere else and the focus of his gaze has been sharp, true and unblinking.

At the age of fourteen he began his working life as a miner at the Dean and Chapter Colliery and at sixteen he joined the Spennymoor Sketching Club, that enlightened educational and cultural project of the late 1930’s that enabled a rich broadening of his artistic horizons. On his tutor Bill Farrell’s advice, that he could do no better than paint the life he knew, he chronicled an entire way of life. Without diminishing the harsh realities of life and work, his paintings create a sense of time and place by depicting the lyrical qualities of his surroundings in which time is defeated.

Sid Chaplin, his fellow miner and alumnus of the Pitman’s Academy at Spennymoor vividly described in a memorable ‘Guardian’ article of 1960 the ‘Narrow World’ that Cornish had created “…the living are caught before they go; the pigeon fanciers, corner-enders, off-shift miners … In a moment the bus will come and the buzzer blow for the backshift. Now it is all recorded, time cannot take away the seven ages of man and women – his grandmother, mother, sisters, wife and daughter; or his father and brothers, his friends and pit marras. Soon the baby will be a small boy: he will change: a drawing or painting is a shot against time.”

Illustrated with many early paintings and drawings, the accompanying essays provide a fascinating insight into the artistic, cultural and social developments taking place in the post war years while Cornish was emerging to become one of the region’s most respected artists.

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Softback, 160 pages
Edited by Mara-Helen Wood, with essays by William Feaver, William Varley, Michael Chaplin and Dr Gail-Nina Anderson
134 full colour illustrations
235 x 197mm, ISBN 9780947940218

Norman Cornish 1919 – 2014, set himself the task of recording what it was like to live in Spennymoor, a small mining town in north east England in the middle of the 20th century. He had little interest in anywhere else and the focus of his gaze has been sharp, true and unblinking.

At the age of fourteen he began his working life as a miner at the Dean and Chapter Colliery and at sixteen he joined the Spennymoor Sketching Club, that enlightened educational and cultural project of the late 1930’s that enabled a rich broadening of his artistic horizons. On his tutor Bill Farrell’s advice, that he could do no better than paint the life he knew, he chronicled an entire way of life. Without diminishing the harsh realities of life and work, his paintings create a sense of time and place by depicting the lyrical qualities of his surroundings in which time is defeated.

Sid Chaplin, his fellow miner and alumnus of the Pitman’s Academy at Spennymoor vividly described in a memorable ‘Guardian’ article of 1960 the ‘Narrow World’ that Cornish had created “…the living are caught before they go; the pigeon fanciers, corner-enders, off-shift miners … In a moment the bus will come and the buzzer blow for the backshift. Now it is all recorded, time cannot take away the seven ages of man and women – his grandmother, mother, sisters, wife and daughter; or his father and brothers, his friends and pit marras. Soon the baby will be a small boy: he will change: a drawing or painting is a shot against time.”

Illustrated with many early paintings and drawings, the accompanying essays provide a fascinating insight into the artistic, cultural and social developments taking place in the post war years while Cornish was emerging to become one of the region’s most respected artists.

Softback, 160 pages
Edited by Mara-Helen Wood, with essays by William Feaver, William Varley, Michael Chaplin and Dr Gail-Nina Anderson
134 full colour illustrations
235 x 197mm, ISBN 9780947940218

Norman Cornish 1919 – 2014, set himself the task of recording what it was like to live in Spennymoor, a small mining town in north east England in the middle of the 20th century. He had little interest in anywhere else and the focus of his gaze has been sharp, true and unblinking.

At the age of fourteen he began his working life as a miner at the Dean and Chapter Colliery and at sixteen he joined the Spennymoor Sketching Club, that enlightened educational and cultural project of the late 1930’s that enabled a rich broadening of his artistic horizons. On his tutor Bill Farrell’s advice, that he could do no better than paint the life he knew, he chronicled an entire way of life. Without diminishing the harsh realities of life and work, his paintings create a sense of time and place by depicting the lyrical qualities of his surroundings in which time is defeated.

Sid Chaplin, his fellow miner and alumnus of the Pitman’s Academy at Spennymoor vividly described in a memorable ‘Guardian’ article of 1960 the ‘Narrow World’ that Cornish had created “…the living are caught before they go; the pigeon fanciers, corner-enders, off-shift miners … In a moment the bus will come and the buzzer blow for the backshift. Now it is all recorded, time cannot take away the seven ages of man and women – his grandmother, mother, sisters, wife and daughter; or his father and brothers, his friends and pit marras. Soon the baby will be a small boy: he will change: a drawing or painting is a shot against time.”

Illustrated with many early paintings and drawings, the accompanying essays provide a fascinating insight into the artistic, cultural and social developments taking place in the post war years while Cornish was emerging to become one of the region’s most respected artists.

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