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Eric Ravilious  1903-1942

Eric Ravilious The Vale of the White Horse circa 1939
© Tate
The Vale of the White Horse  circa 1939

Pencil and watercolour on paper
support: 451 x 324 mm
on paper, unique

Purchased 1940

N05164
Ravilious saw himself as part of a long tradition of English landscape painters, and his use of flat watercolour recalls the work of John Sell Cotman in the early nineteenth century. However, his pictures often subvert tradition as much as echo it. His depiction of the countryside in the rain is familiar, but the low viewpoint makes the image disconcerting. This emphasises the mass of the hill and provides an unusual view of the White Horse cut into the chalk at Uffington in Berkshire, one of Britain’s most ancient sites. It was, perhaps, the surprisingly abstract depiction of the White Horse that attracted modern artists.
 (From the display caption September 2004)