Winifred Nicholson by Christopher Andreae

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Reviews of 'Winifred Nicholson' by Christopher Andreae and related articles:

Palant House Gallery Magazine PALLANT HOUSE GALLERY MAGAZINE
June-November, 2009

'Winifred Nicholson'
by Christopher Andreae

Megan Mikel
1/3 column

Best remembered for her flower and landscape paintings, Winifred Nicholson's beautiful works are at once sensitive and full of light and life..."

Country Life COUNTRY LIFE
03 June, 2009

Bringing an artist into the light
Ruth Guilding
1 page - 2 colour reproduction

"Winifred Nicholson's life provided her with a material comfort and continuity that permeates her art. Her pictures are all of of a piece: small rural landscapes, domestic scenes ad many dozens of jugs or pots set on window sills in front of a landscape..."

Cumbria Life CUMBRIA LIFE
June 2009

New Nicholson show and book

1/3 page - 1 colour reproduction

"Winifred Nicholson's oil on canvas, Ulswater, pictured, painted in the late Thirties, is one or the works on show at an exhibition of the Cumbrian artist's painting at the Crane Kalman Gallery in Brompton Road, London from June 4 to July 25..."

Galleries - June GALLERIES MAGAZINE
June 2009

Winifred Nicholson
Philip Vann
1/2 page - 1 colour reproduction

"With exhilarating yet disciplined spontaneity, Winifred Nicholson (1893-1981) painted flower groupings, sea and landscapes, windowsill still-lives on the verge of numinous vistas, as well as exquisitely sensitive portraits of people..."

Art of England ART OF ENGLAND
June 2009

Winifred Nicholson
Experiments in Light and Colour

Christopher Andreae
4 pages - 6 colour reproductions

"The changing vitality of light and colour were the inspiration of Winifred Nicholson's art. In the longstanding historical dialogue between 'colour' and 'form' she was unquestionably on the side of colour..."

Interiors INTERIORS
June 2009

Exhibition Diary
Frances Spalding
2 pages - 4 colour reproductions

"Winifred Nicholson had a passion for colour. Rainbows, she once said, were important events in her life. She argued that 'joy in colour is inborn within each of us'. She tapped into this by painting flowers..."