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Study for "Dead Spring"

Maker (British, 1889 - 1946)
ClassificationsDRAWINGS
Date1929
Mediumgraphite pencil on wove LaGelidense paper
Dimensionsimage: 13 1/2 × 10 3/4 in. (34.3 × 27.3 cm.) sheet: 17 3/4 × 12 3/4 in. (45.1 × 32.4 cm.)
Credit LineThe Huntington Library, Art Museum, and Botanical Gardens
Label TextThis is a preparatory drawing Nash made for a stilllife painting called Dead Spring. The painting began in response to a query his ailing father had made prior to his death: “Do you think I shall see the Spring?” It depicts a dead potted plant sitting in the window of the artist’s London apartment. The contrast of organic and geometrical shapes is even greater in this drawing than in the painting, as Nash’s precise lines spear through the drooping leaves and wilted flowers. In its emphasis on decay, the image becomes a modern memento mori (2022).

Status
Not on view
Object number96.4
Exhibitions
Darkling O'er the Mountains
Paul Nash
1917
Object number: 94.11
Illustration for Blake's Tireil
Paul Nash
1917
Object number: 94.10
Path in the Wood
Paul Nash
1920
Object number: 97.6
Regent Street
Joseph Nash
1827
Object number: 59.55.959
Interior of Bodleian Library
Joseph Nash
n.d.
Object number: 66.53
Saint Benet's Abbey, Norfolk
Joseph Nash
1856
Object number: 63.52.159
House of Commons
Joseph Nash
n.d.
Object number: 59.55.960
River Scene
Frederick Nash
n.d.
Object number: 59.55.958
Banquetting Scene in Medieval Setting
Frederick Nash
n.d.
Object number: 69.58
Study for Spring Turning
Grant Wood
ca. 1936
Object number: 83.8.53
Gwen John
late 1910's
Object number: 94.16
Dog with Dead Deer
Edwin Henry Landseer
n.d.
Object number: 59.55.797