
The sky was heavy and my car wipers were working overtime, it was an indifferent day, just like any wintry afternoon in England. This seemed very appropriate, since I was driving down Nevinson Avenue and Any Wintry afternoon in England happens to be the title of one of the artist CRW Nevinson’s better known paintings.
I have always been aware the work of Christopher Richard Wynne Nevinson. He was one of the first English painters to show the influence of European art movements such as Cubism and Futurism, although I don’t think his reputation has endured as strongly as his contemporaries. Never-the-less Nevinson had a fascinating artistic career.
He was the son of the renowned radical investigative journalist Henry Nevinson, who, as foreign correspondent for the Daily Chronicle, was notable for his reporting of the Boar War and his exposé of the appalling slave trade in Portuguese Angola.
Nevinson’s mother Margaret seemed equally active in promoting social justice. She had a successful career as a teacher before marrying Henry Nevinson. After marriage she was involved with good works, presumably because it was not appropriate for married women to pursue their careers in those days. She was elected to serve as a Poor Law Guardian in London, alongside Emmeline and Christabel Pankhurst. However, in 1907, several women, including Margaret broke away from the influence of the Pankhursts and formed the Women’s Freedom League.
Christopher was born in London in 1889. Growing up as the son of two such radicals was obviously not always easy. So controversial were the causes of his parents at the time, that the young Christoper remembers being booed by neighbours as he walked down his street!
In 1907 Nevinson went to St John’s Wood School of Art, later transferring to the famous Slade Art School. It was at the Slade that he met likes of Stanley Spencer and Mark Gertler, now seen as two of the most idiosyncratic enduring names in British painting. It seems that Nevinson was to spend much of his career in the company of influential thinkers.
Nevinson’s life seems to follow a romantic’s blueprint. After leaving the Slade, he moved to Paris where he met Pablo Picasso, Claude Derain and Henri Matisse. He also shared a studio with two Italian artists who were also to set become big names in twentieth century art, Amedeo Modigliani and the Futurist Gino Severini.
Because of the people he was mixing with in the French avant-garde, Nevinson was one of the first English artists to become influenced by the work of The Cubists and the Italian Futurist movement.
The fast and furious Futurist Movement was founded in 1909 to celebrate the force, power and speed of the new mechanised age and to denounce the so-called static art of the past. Futurist paintings looked much different from anything that had gone before and energetically conveyed a sense of movement through blurring forms and overlapping multiple images, drawing heavily upon the influence of the new art of cinematography.
Nevinson embraced the philosophy of Futurism, so much so that in 1914 he collaborated with the leading theorist of Futurism, the poet Philippo Marinetti on a manifesto for England entitled Vital English Art.
The outbreak of the Great War curtailed his Futurist career and Nevinson, who was a pacifist, volunteered for the Red Cross. He was sent to France to work as a stretcher bearer and later on joined the Royal Army Medical Corps. However he was invalided out of the Army in 1916 with rheumatic fever. This must have given him a valuable opportunity to continue painting, because later that year he displayed an exhibition of paintings influenced by his experiences in France.
These paintings were brought to the attention of the War Propaganda Bureau. The bureau had been set up by the then Chancellor of the Exchequer, David Lloyd George and was headed by Charles Masterman, a fellow Liberal MP and successful author. It was the task of the bureau to promote Britain’s interests during the war and it utilised the skills of writers and artists to do this. The bureau was very particular about the information it relayed and very strict, for example only two official photographers were allowed to take pictures at the Western Front, both of them Army Officers, and the penalty for anyone else caught with a camera was the firing squad.
In 1917 Nevinson was sent to the Western Front where he painted an impressive 60 pictures. He was not particularly happy in his role as an Official War Artist and not all of his paintings were accepted. Paths of Glory (1917), which graphically depicts two dead soldiers in No Man’s Land, earned him a reprimand from the War Office and was not officially allowed to be seen by the public until after the war had ended.
It is worth noting here, that if you continue along Nevinson Avenue in Whiteleas you will then come onto Galsworthy Road. An interesting coincidence, as John Galsworthy, famed as the author of the Forsyte Saga, was also recruited by the War Propaganda Bureau as a war writer.
After the war, Nevinson declared himself to be utterly tired of chaos and rejecting Futurnism, turned to a more conventional style of painting. This is where some art critics believe that Nevinson’s work lost the social concern that he demonstrated so graphically in his war art and became more traditional and rather pedestrian. Yet if you look at his atmospheric depictions of cities like Paris, London and New York, they do have great worth as evocative observations.
So how would CRW Nevinson have portrayed South Shields in a painting? Well Any Wintry Afternoon in England probably gives us a clue. It’s a rainy afternoon, footballers are playing on some spare land and in the background factory chimneys belch out acrid smoke which billows across the terraced roofs and gas tanks… a passing steam train adds to the clamour. It’s probably a homogenised image drawn from many different locations, but there is definite sense of life in a typical English town.
When the Second World War broke out, Nevinson’s vision and skills were once more required when he became an official War Artist for a new conflict, sadly this time his career came to an abrupt end when, in 1942 he suffered a stroke. Four years later Christopher Richard Wynne Nevinson died.
I wonder how many people who travel down Nevinson Avenue know of his work, or even know who he was? I suspect that when this estate was built, his reputation looked as strong as his near contemporaries, Paul Nash and Graham Sutherland, who also have streets named after them in Whiteleas. Maybe if he had continued to make social statements through his work, his career would now be more highly regarded? But after witnessing the appalling atrocities of war, can we really blame him for retreating into the peaceful world of traditional landscape painting. BH.
Taken from ‘Write Up Your Street’ (ISBN0-9548587-5-1) Arts Advance Press 2005