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Algernon Newton  1880-1968

Algernon Newton The Surrey Canal, Camberwell 1935
© Tate
The Surrey Canal, Camberwell  1935

Oil on canvas
support: 718 x 914 mm frame: 860 x 1062 x 85 mm
painting

Presented by the Trustees of the Chantrey Bequest 1940

N05343
Newton began to exhibit regularly at the Royal Academy summer shows in 1923 and he continued to send paintings for several decades. His chosen subjects were views of London, mostly in the St John's Wood, Hampstead, Kentish Town and Paddington areas. He was particularly fond of including a stretch of water in his compositions and often chose back-street views of canals, as here. He liked the slightly forlorn Regency and early Victorian terraces that faced the canals, and gave them a curiously uninhabited look. He once wrote: 'There is beauty to be found in everything, you only have to search for it; a gasometer can make as beautiful a picture as a palace on the Grand Canal, Venice. It simply depends on the artist's vision.'
 (From the display caption August 2004)