Graham Sutherland

GRAHAM SUTHERLAND

British artist Graham Sutherland worked with both glass and fabric to create prints and portraits. His core inspirations included religion (he designed the giant central tapestry for in the rebuild of Coventry Cathedral) and the works of Paul Nash, Samuel Palmer and Pablo Picasso. Working initially in watercolour and later oils, Sutherland spent the 1920s, 1930s and 1940s painting romantic, sometimes surreal British landscapes – one of his favourite places to paint was the Pembrokeshire coast, calling it the place he “began to learn painting”

The Tortoise, from Apollinaire. Le Bestiaire ou Cortège d’Orphée 1978-9


etching and aquatint

signed, numbered and dated

an edition of 75

66 x 88 cm


PRICE ON APPLICATION


THE SWIMMER, 1973


lithograph

signed, numbered and dated

an edition of 75

76 x 60 cm


PRICE ON APPLICATION


THORN STRUCTURE, 1973


lithograph

signed, numbered and dated

an edition of 75

76 x 60 cm


PRICE ON APPLICATION


COMPOSITION, 1973


lithograph

signed and inscribed

50 x 49 cm

 

PRICE ON APPLICATION


COMPOSITION, 1973


lithograph

signed and inscribed

66 x 50 cm

 

PRICE ON APPLICATION


THORN STRUCTURE, 1973


lithograph

signed, numbered and dated

an edition of 75

76 x 60 cm


PRICE ON APPLICATION


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