Brilliant Destiny: The Age of Augustus John


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Description

Considered by John Singer Sargent to be the best British draughtsman since the Renaissance, Augustus John was the first of the British ' Post-Impressionists' . Such was his importance that Wyndham Lewis called the ten years up to 1914 ' the Augustan decade' . Virginia Woolf wrote in 1921 that ' The age of Augustus John was dawning' . Handsome, unconventional and full of brilliant promise and Bohemian spirit, John was the man almost every young British art student wanted to emulate. This book reveals why, telling his extraordinary story from his birth in south Wales in 1878 through to the end of his youth in the closing stages of the First World War. Interweaving his biography are the personalities who surrounded John, and the book looks at their influence on him, and his upon them. They include his fellow students at the Slade School of Art - his sister Gwen John and future wife Ida Nettleship, and his friends William Orpen, Ambrose McEvoy, Spencer Gore and Percy Wyndham Lewis. This book is a long overdue, new interpretation of this singular figure, who was both at the heart of the British artistic milieu, and yet set apart from its movements and manifestos.

Author: David Boyd Haycock
Publisher: Lund Humphries Publishers Ltd
Published: 11/22/2023
Pages: 304
Binding Type: Hardcover
Weight: 1.90lbs
ISBN13: 9781848226579
ISBN10: 1848226578
BISAC Categories:
- Art | History | Modern (Late 19th Century to 1945)
- Art | Individual Artists | Monographs

About the Author
David Boyd Haycock is an experienced freelance writer and lecturer, who has curated exhibitions at Dulwich Picture Gallery (2013 and 2020), as well as two exhibitions on Augustus John at Poole Museum and Salisbury Museum (2018 and 2019) and on the equestrian painter Lucy Kemp-Welch at the Russell-Cotes Museum and Art Gallery in Bournemouth (2023). His group biography, A Crisis of Brilliance: Five Young British Artists and the Great War, was ' Book of the Week' in The Guardian and shortlisted as ' Non-fiction book of the year' by the Writers' Guild of Great Britain in 2010.