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CLAUD LOVAT FRASER (1890-1921)

Coreb, a Spirit (1921 United Kingdom)

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Item Stock Code

809

Item Medium Description

Pen and ink, watercolour and bodycolour over traces of pencil

Item Signed, Inscribed, Dated Details

Signed and dated 2 March 1921 and inscribed with title Inscribed on the reverse by the artist’s widow: C Lovat Fraser/Design for Stage Dress/”Coreb” in the Merry Devil of Edm[onton]/March 1921/One of a set of twelve “Monsters” whic[h] he was preparing for a one man show [at]/the Leicester Galleries. The set was n[ot] completed as he died while still working [on] them./Not for Sale/Property of Mrs C Lov[at Fraser]/353a Fulham [?]/SW10

European Dimensions

30.50 cm wide   52.00 cm high

UK/USA Converted Dimensions

12.01 inches wide  20.47 inches high

Item Provenance & History

Grace Lovat Fraser, the artist's widow.

Item Exhibition History

London, Leicester Galleries, Claude Lovat Fraser Memorial Exhibition, 1921;
Oxford, Ashmolean Museum, 1968, no.108;
London, Victoria & Albert Museum, Claud Lovat Fraser, 1969, no.13.

Item Description / Dealer Expertise

Claud Lovat Fraser was born in London and educated at Charterhouse. Initially intending to join the family firm of solicitors he gave up his legal studies in order to attend the Westminster School of Art. His love of literature and theatre led him to concentrate his artistic output on theatrical design and highly original book illustrations and publications. His passion for the work of Jacobean and eighteenth century playwrights was encouraged by his friends Edward Gordon Craig and Herbert Beerbohm Tree who also introduced him to the world of theatrical costume and set design.

Despite a history of frail health he volunteered for the army in 1914 and served with distinction at the Battle of Loos and in the Ypres Salient. In February 1916 he was sent to hospital suffering from shell shock and gas and was never to return to the front. At this time he produced a number of amusing and sometimes moving watercolours recording the incidents and uniforms of the front. After the war he worked with extreme energy holding a number of exhibitions and most importantly producing his revolutionary designs for the costumes and sets for Nigel Playfair’s important productions of As You Like It and The Beggar’s Opera.

This is one of Fraser’s last works and was intended to be included in a planned one-man exhibition of thirty-six carefully finished costume designs to be held at the Leicester Galleries in the autumn of 1921. In her autobiography the artist’s widow described the finished designs as “some of the finest work Lovat every produced; they consisted of three sets called Men, Women and Monsters and represented characters Lovat had chosen from his favourite plays” (Grace Lovat Fraser, In the Days of My Youth, 1970, p.275). Sadly the series was never completed as Fraser died of exhaustion and his weakened heart whilst staying with his friend Paul Nash at Dymchurch, Kent in June 1921. The Leicester Galleries’ one-man show became a Memorial Exhibition in December 1921.

FRASER
Type Artist/Maker
Country of origin England
Born 1890
Died 1921

Born in London to watercolour artist Florence Margaret Walsh; Fraser became a brief employee at his father’s city firm in 1908, before enrolling at Westminster School of Art in 1911 to study etching under Walter Sickert. He left after six months to set up his own London studio and became friends with painters Albert Rutherston and Paul Nash; Haldane MacFall, who wrote the article ‘The art of Lovat Fraser’ in the Art Chronicle (12th November 1911); and Edward Gordon Craig, who encouraged Fraser to become involved with The Society of Theatre. Fraser’s solo exhibition in 1913 featured drawings of theatrical characters and scenes, as well as decorations for chapbooks and broadsides; published in 1913 titled Flying Fame.

Returning from the army in 1916, Fraser worked on visual propaganda and army records. A successful exhibition in 1919 at Mansard Gallery in London, featured designs for settings and costumes for As You Like It and La serva padrona, created for productions by Nigel Playfair at the Lyric Theatre, Hammersmith. A pioneer in small stage design, including his work for The Beggar's Opera at the Lyric in 1920; Fraser went on to produce textile designs and book illustrations. In 1921, he began work on a solo exhibition at the Leicester Galleries, which became his memorial exhibition following his death.

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Please email or call +44 (0)20-7602 1959 for more information or to purchase this item.

Status

FOR SALE



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Sarah Colegrave

Sarah Colegrave
By appointment
London
W14
England

Open: Open by appointment and at fairs

Contacts: Sarah Colegrave
Telephone: +44 (0)20-7602 1959
Mobile: +44 (0)7775 943722
Website: www.sarahcolegrave.co.uk
We are members of:
BRITISH ANTIQUE DEALERS' ASSOCIATION
BRITISH ANTIQUE DEALERS' ASSOCIATION
LAPADA - THE ASSOCIATION OF ART & ANTIQUES DEALERS
LAPADA - THE ASSOCIATION OF ART & ANTIQUES DEALERS
Established: 2004
We deal in:

19th- and 20th-century British pictures

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