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In 1932, Paul Nash wondered 'whether it is possible to "go modern" and still "be British".' He wrote, 'the battle lines have been drawn up: internationalism versus an indigenous culture; renovation versus conservatism; the industrial versus the pastoral; the functional versus the futile.' Nash attempted to reconcile these binaries by developing a distinctively British form of surrealism in which mock monumental objects are set in the landscapes of southern England as if they were prehistoric megaliths. The objects stand out as gigantic, inexplicable presences and yet are deeply rooted in the landscape. Mineral Objects depicts pieces of bituminous shale (so-called coal money) from Kimmeridge, Dorset. The shale was worked to make jewelry and amulets in prehistoric and Roman times.
Title
Mineral Objects
Date
1935
Medium
oil on canvas
Measurements
H 50.2 x W 60.3 cm
Accession number
B1998.21.1
Acquisition method
Paul Mellon Fund
Work type
Painting
Signature/marks description
signed, centre right: PN (monogram)