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Cedric Morris
Early Spring Plants, 1946
Oil on canvas
23 5/8 x 19 3/4 in. (60 x 50 cm)
Signed and dated lower right ‘Cedric Morris/1946’; signed and inscribed on an Ixion Society label verso
Philip Mould & Co.
To view all current artworks for sale visit philipmould.com Prior to the War, Cedric Morris had been gaining prominence within the gardening world as a breeder of irises and a...
To view all current artworks for sale visit philipmould.com
Here, a central blue vase holds a writhing bunch of corkscrew hazel (corylus avellane) cascading with pendent yellow catkins. These catkins develop during the late winter and early spring, so it is possible that Morris painted this composition at some point between January and March of 1946. The deep green ivory on the left of the vase and the green and brown leaves to the right, which are likely to be Magnolia leaves, are both evergreen varieties and further suggests that this painting was executed during the early months of 1946. Indeed, horticulturist and friend Beth Chatto remembers her first encounters with Morris and his paintings and their seasonal nature; ‘Not till after his death did I realise Cedric's garden was an extension of his palette. It was not a planned painting but a collection of colours, shapes and textures emerging and fading with the seasons.’[1]
Whilst many of Morris’ paintings celebrate the striking colours which occur at height of spring and summer blooms, here Morris accepts the natural timeline of burgeoning blooms, and here celebrates the more restful and subdued winters.
Morris consistently worked from species of plants and flowers that he greatly admired and in almost all instances those which he propagated himself at the Pound and later Benton End. His keen and scientific understanding of plants informed his approach when he came to paint them. This imbues his painting with a sense of heightened character and individuality particularly when discerning the formal and tonal differences between flowers.
Provenance
Mary Cookson and thence by descentAnderson and Garland, Newcastle, 23 January 2020.