
Pen and Ink
|
Spencer’s earliest drawings,
‘a very odd assortment… greatly in advance, both in performance
and imagination, of the usual work of boys of his age’, according to
his brother Gilbert, were drawn from his own invention, reproductions,
book illustrations, and the scenes around him. For a family in which
literature, music and religion were key interests, art was less
central, but through their conventional Victorian taste he became
aware of some popular Pre-Raphaelite pictures and paintings at the
Royal Academy. Books were plentiful in Fernlea and book illustration
became a key source for him. Here
four figures, two male and two female – possibly pixies - appear in
costume in a lush meadow reminiscent of Cookham, with an engaging
rabbit in the foreground. At this stage, he has not yet learnt how to
achieve a totally coherent composition, something in which he later
excelled. Lent
by a private collector |