Stanley Spencer 1891-1959
50.8 x 76.2 cm
In the 1920s, Spencer established a compositional format for his landscapes, which combined a section of foreground detail with a backdrop of deep perspective. By the 1930s, the foreground of such paintings took on a heightened level of detailed analysis. For example, in Landscape in North Wales, 1938, Spencer depicts minute sections of rust on the barbed wire that crosses the breadth of the canvas, and in View from the Tennis Court, Cookham, 1938, he pays great attention to detailing green moss growing on the wooden fencing, which, intriguingly, forms a key feature of the composition. These somewhat inconsequential details, which the artist could have chosen to omit, are a testament to his delight in capturing each and every aspect of his surroundings.
Spencer’s exacting observation of nature is particularly evident in this work, where the overhead telephone wire is highlighted with thin brushstrokes of white, evoking the glisten of fallen snow. The composition focuses on the apple trees, and the complex design of their individual criss-crossing twigs and spindly branches is recorded faithfully, with skilful ease.
Apple Trees in Snow is devoid of figures and as such there is an overwhelming impression of quiet. This is further reinforced by the snow, which lies completely untouched, conveying a notion of stillness and hibernation. The image is pregnant with a feeling of expectation, of the sun to come out, the snow to melt and new growth. Unlike Spencer’s other landscapes, which offer an idealistic vision of the English countryside, often evoking ‘a feeling of idyllic warmth and sensuousness’, this work, dominated by blueish-grey, brown and white tones, is imbued with an intense poetic melancholy. (1) The painting can be read as a mirror not only of Spencer’s emotional state, but also of the collective mood felt during the Second World War.
(1) Keith Bell, Stanley Spencer: A Complete Catalogue of the Paintings, Phaidon, London, 1992, p300
Provenance
Redfern Gallery, 1946
No record
Redfern Gallery, 1952
Miss Hannah Gluck
Christie's
Anthony D'Offay Gallery
Sotheby's 1990
Ivor Braka Ltd., London
Exhibitions
Leicester Galleries, 1942
Redfern Gallery,Coronation Exhibition, 1953, cat no.98
Literature
Keith Bell,Stanley Spencer: A Complete Catalogue of the Paintings, Phaidon Press Ltd., London, 1992, illus b/w cat no.291, p466