Eric Ravilious, Hull's Mill, c1936
Numbered edition of 150; 297mm × 210mm
Price incl delivery £195
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Published jointly by Merivale Editions and Jennings Fine Art, Hull's Mill is
an engraving on boxwood hand printed by Ian Mortimer from the re-discovered
original block. The edition is limited to 150 numbered copies for sale on
160gsm vélin d’Arches paper. The paper size is 296 x 209mm; image size 195 x
125mm. The print is presented in a paper portfolio with an historical note
by Alan Powers.
The History (by Alan Powers)
Eric Raviliouss large wood engraving of Hulls Mill
is not completely unknown, but only a few prints of it have ever
been made. We know the moment when Ravilious discovered the subject,
for he wrote to his close friend Helen Binyon on 3rd June, 1935,
I want to go out again this evening to a Hovis Mill
rather like one at Barcombe and pretty as possible, white and
almost new looking. This was Hulls Mill on the River
Colne, where it flows downstream from Raviliouss new home
town of Castle Hedingham towards Colchester. He took special delight
in the shallow stream that still crosses the road as one approaches
the mill a pleasure to cycle through and it makes
such a pleasant gurgling noise. In another letter he wrote,
It is an extraordinarily attractive place, and so
it remains today.
Helen Binyons letter has a rough drawing of the upstream
view of the mill, very much as it appears on the right hand side
of the print, and in another engraving on the cover of Country
Walks No.2, produced for London Transport in 1936. The central
image of the engraving shows the mill from its end-on, downstream
aspect, with the single storey addition housing sacks of flour,
waiting to be collected from their raised loading platform, as
painted by Ravilious in the watercolour Hulls Mill (exhibited
at the Zwemmer Gallery in 1936), recently acquired by the Fry
Art Gallery at Saffron Walden. The watercolour includes the shallow
water splash ford, which the engraving omits. In the engraving,
the mill on the left may be a different building entirely, and
the reason for including three mills in one picture is not clear.
The handsome black horse appears in the letter and in both the
engravings, representing, like the mill itself, a benign form
of power soon to become obsolete.
Why was this engraving made? No record survives of a commission,
although at this stage of his career, Ravilious could no longer
spare the time to engrave simply for his own pleasure, as he did
when younger. A letter to Helen Binyon in November 1935 mentions
preparing a large block, and this one fits the description.
The block itself is under type height, and therefore presumably
planed down after being used for one or more other engraving,
as sold by T. N. Lawrence and Son (of Bleeding Heart Yard) as
a cheap alternative to full height blocks. The cutting technique,
especially in the foreground tree, seemingly white with may, is
looser than usual, suggesting an urge to experiment. As well as
straightening the road, Ravilious has emphasised the line of telegraph
poles, showing his fondness for abstract geometric structure,
while the little boat on the dark water, absent from the other
renderings of this subject, adds a touch of Schubertian wanderlust.
Alan Powers
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Eric Ravilious, Hull's Mill £195
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