Clare Woods

28 November 2013
Clare Woods, Obscene Porridge, 2012, oil on aluminium, 70 x 70 cm, © the artist. Courtesy the artist and Stuart Shave Modern Art

Tullie House Museum & Art Gallery

Purchased by the Contemporary Art Society for Tullie House Museum & Art Gallery, Carlisle. Established in 1893 by the Carlisle Corporation, Tullie House Museum & Art Gallery is situated in a 17th century Jacobean building. The modern collection was acquired through a purchase scheme (1933-1975) under the guidance of William Rothenstein. Key artists purchased were Stanley Spencer, Wyndham Lewis, Vanessa Bell and David Nash. Tullie House’s rural surroundings of the Lake District have made landscape a key feature of the collection, and an area the curators are keen to focus on.

Clare Woods (b.1970, Southampton) lives and works in Herefordshire.  Her paintings are derived from her photographs of undergrowth and vegetation, which are taken at night, often in desolate, contested or overlooked locations such as areas of scrub or deep woodland. Painstakingly transcribed using layers of enamel paint on aluminium, the resulting images are often ambiguous and disturbing, claustrophobic in their detail, and psychologically-charged.

Obscene Porridge, 2012 is part of a body of work that found inspiration from a letter Paul Nash wrote to his wife from Passchendaele battlefield during the First World War.  This particular work painting is connected to a black and white photograph of the Passchendaele battlefield and the artist Paul Nash’s description of it, “The rain drives on, the stinking mud becomes more evilly yellow, the shell holes fill up with green-white water, the roads and tracks are covered in inches of slime” (Paul Nash 18th November, 1917). The battlefield is infamous for the number of casualties and the mud which drowned soldiers and horses.

The painting complements Tullie House Museum & Art Gallery’s growing collection of landscapes including Cumbrian artist Keith Tyson’s Nature Painting acquired in 2009. The museum also has an important collection of early watercolours and drawings by Paul Nash, a major British artist who served with the Artists’ Rifles in the First World War. We have his striking watercolour of Ruins of a Church at Voormezeele, Ypres Salient, dated 1917.

Obscene Porridge, 2012 is currently on display at Tullie House Museum & Art Gallery

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