Godfrey Miller (Godfrey Clive Miller) (1893-1964)
Slade figure
study of a female torso, c. 1930–34
Stamped with
John Henshaw’s studio stamp of Godfrey Miller’s estate and numbered “S113”
Pencil on buff
coloured paper
Size: (image
within the window mount) 9.7 x 6.9 cm; (frame) 40.5 x 34.8 cm.
Condition: the
sheet has a pinhole on the right side of the figure; there is a bubble in the
Perspex/acrylic sheet; the timber frame is unvarnished and has minor signs of
its age (i.e. yellow oxidisation, insect specks and dustiness) and the backing
sheet should be replaced.
I am selling
this framed very early and rare drawing (in the sense that Miller destroyed/culled
most of his early drawings) for AU$1200 including postage and handling to anywhere
in the world.
If you are
interested in purchasing this original and very early drawing by one of
Australia’s most famous artists, please contact me
(oz_jim@printsandprinciples.com) and I will send you a PayPal invoice to make
the payment easy.
Although this
early drawing by Godfrey Miller is an academic study executed from direct
observation during a life class, it has many of the hallmarks of his mature
works. By this I mean that the line work shows Miller visually searching for
the structure of the figure’s form in a way that a blind person might “feel”
the figure’s surface tensions, curves, soft and hard spots. This approach is
often described—at least by me—as a haptic approach as opposed to a strictly
visual one. What is especially lovely to see is the way that Miller phrases his
lines by varying the pressure on the pencil so that the lines flow in the
pictorial space of the image or punctuate important landmarks like the figure’s
navel.
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