Image of Gallery in South Kensington
Request to view at the Prints & Drawings Study Room, level E , Case MP, Shelf 55, Box A

Print

ca. 1970 (Published)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

According to poet and scholar Walter Strachan (1903-1994) in his Connoisseur article ‘Graphic Owls from France’, this was the image that particularly fascinated the child visitors to his house. A very abstract image, it was created using a palette knife. He became interested in surrealism when he met Paul-Emile Borduas (1905-1960) and the French-Canadian art group “Les Automatistes”, so called because influenced by surrealist automatism, spontaneous writing or drawing. He moved to Paris in 1947 and continued with surrealist art with the help of Marcel Duchamp (1887-1968). After a move to Paris in 1947, his paintings became very sculptural as he began squeezing paint directly from the tube and shaping it with a palette knife.

Poet and scholar Walter Strachan (1903-1994) was fascinated by the art of the book. His interest was inspired by a visit to an exhibition of artists’ books at the National Gallery in London in May 1945. In due course he wrote many articles on the subject, as well as a major reference work, The Artist and the Book in France (published 1969); he also encouraged successive Keepers of the National Art Library at the V&A “to buy them for England.” To this end he visited France every year, to meet the artists, and acquired proof pages to illustrate his articles and to show to potential purchasers of the books, including the V&A. Over the years he amassed a collection of images of owls; some of these were illustrations from livres d’artistes, and others were designed especially for him as gifts or greetings. The collection of owls began with a visit to the artist Roger Chastel (1897-1981) in 1952, where he witnessed the printing of Le Bestiaire de Paul Eluard. In a subsequent article (“Genesis and Growth of a Collection”, for Connoisseur, 1972) he explained: “My article on Chastel’s Bestiaire had the happy result of bringing me a special print on Auvergne paper of the owl which I had admired in the book. Contacts in the art-world of Paris are close and friendly, and I was marked down as an owl-man, in consequence of which I have gradually been given dedicated owl prints and originals in every medium from pen and ink to enamel…”


Object details

Categories
Object type
Materials and techniques
Colour lithograph on paper
Brief description
Colour lithograph, page-spread of a book, owl, by Jean Paul Riopelle, ca. 1970.
Physical description
This image is a page from an unidentified book. The inside of the folding shows two colour lithographs. On the left is an abstract image in grey block and blue, red and black line. On the right is an image of a long-eared owl. The outside of the folding has an essay entitled 'Riopelle, ou l'obsession de la peinture' by Franco Russoli. The beginning of the essay is on page 3, and the end of an essay is on page 10.
Dimensions
  • Height: 38cm
  • Open width: 56cm
  • Folded width: 28cm
Marks and inscriptions
'Riopelle col. litho' (Inscribed lower right on page containing image of owl.)
Credit line
Bequeathed by Walter Strachan
Object history
This forms part of a collection of prints, drawings and paintings of owls bequeathed to the V&A by Walter Strachan (1903-1994). Strachan, a scholar and collector of Livres d'Artistes, became friendly with a large number of artists, who, on hearing that he had a fondness for owls, began sending him images to add to his collection.
Subject depicted
Summary
According to poet and scholar Walter Strachan (1903-1994) in his Connoisseur article ‘Graphic Owls from France’, this was the image that particularly fascinated the child visitors to his house. A very abstract image, it was created using a palette knife. He became interested in surrealism when he met Paul-Emile Borduas (1905-1960) and the French-Canadian art group “Les Automatistes”, so called because influenced by surrealist automatism, spontaneous writing or drawing. He moved to Paris in 1947 and continued with surrealist art with the help of Marcel Duchamp (1887-1968). After a move to Paris in 1947, his paintings became very sculptural as he began squeezing paint directly from the tube and shaping it with a palette knife.

Poet and scholar Walter Strachan (1903-1994) was fascinated by the art of the book. His interest was inspired by a visit to an exhibition of artists’ books at the National Gallery in London in May 1945. In due course he wrote many articles on the subject, as well as a major reference work, The Artist and the Book in France (published 1969); he also encouraged successive Keepers of the National Art Library at the V&A “to buy them for England.” To this end he visited France every year, to meet the artists, and acquired proof pages to illustrate his articles and to show to potential purchasers of the books, including the V&A. Over the years he amassed a collection of images of owls; some of these were illustrations from livres d’artistes, and others were designed especially for him as gifts or greetings. The collection of owls began with a visit to the artist Roger Chastel (1897-1981) in 1952, where he witnessed the printing of Le Bestiaire de Paul Eluard. In a subsequent article (“Genesis and Growth of a Collection”, for Connoisseur, 1972) he explained: “My article on Chastel’s Bestiaire had the happy result of bringing me a special print on Auvergne paper of the owl which I had admired in the book. Contacts in the art-world of Paris are close and friendly, and I was marked down as an owl-man, in consequence of which I have gradually been given dedicated owl prints and originals in every medium from pen and ink to enamel…”
Bibliographic references
  • Russoli, Franco. Riopelle, ou l'obsession de la peinture. In [work unidentified].
  • Strachan, Walter J. Graphic owls from France: variations on a theme in an English private collection. Connoisseur. Aug. 1972. pp.240-247.
Collection
Accession number
E.256-1994

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Record createdSeptember 29, 2005
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