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Paul Nash

April 2021

  • Battle of Britain, 1941, Paul Nash (1889–1946) IWM (Imperial War Museums), Photo credit IWM (Imperial War Museums)

    The Great British Art Tour
    The Great British Art Tour: smoke tracks in a summer sky and Britain’s fight for survival

    With public art collections closed we are bringing the art to you, exploring highlights from across the country in partnership with Art UK. Today’s pick: Paul Nash’s Battle of Britain at the Imperial War Museum London

April 2020

  • Barbara Hepworth, Ben Nicholson and their triplets in the László Moholy-Nagy’s garden.

    Circles and Squares by Caroline Maclean review – the Hampstead modernists

    From Bauhaus to bohemian love … the intricate lives and art of interwar modernists are captured in this hugely enjoyable and well-plotted book

December 2017

  • Winter Sea (1925-1937) by Paul Nash

    Anatomy of an artwork
    Paul Nash’s Winter Sea: the natural cycle of life and death

    The landscape painter created this work in the coastal village of Dymchurch, where he spent time recovering from the horrors he had witnessed at Ypres

May 2017

  • Author Sarah Perry

    On my radar
    On my radar: Sarah Perry’s cultural highlights

    The author on the painful recollections of Tim Winton, bonding with a town’s memory of Dylan Thomas and one of the best 30 minutes of TV she’s ever seen

April 2017

  • detail from The Cherry Orchard by Paul Nash, as shown in Tate Britain’s recent exhibition.

    Top 10s
    Top 10 books about trees

    From Dante to John Clare and James Joyce, matters arboreal have inspired many writers. These are among the choicest specimens

March 2017

  • No bones about it … Peter Kennard’s Protect and Survive, from 1981.

    'Four-minute warning: time to boil your last egg' – 100 years of anti-war protests

    From Paul Nash’s barbed wire truths to Tony Blair’s blazing selfie, the Imperial War Museum is exploring anti-war art and demos. What difference did they make?

November 2016

  • Paul Nash, Pillar and Moon

    Paul Nash review – between dream and nightmare

    Strangeness on the Downs meets the horrors of two world wars in the biggest show of Nash’s work in a generation

October 2016

  • Totes Meer (Dead Sea)
Paul Nash 1889–1946
Totes Meer (Dead Sea)
1940-41
Oil on canvas
Support: 1016 x 1524 mm
frame: 1170 x 1680 x 97 mm
Tate. Presented by the War Artists Advisory Committee, 1946

    This week's best culture
    Five of the best… art exhibitions

    Paul Nash | Power And Protection: Islamic Art And The Supernatural | The View From Here | Deimantas Narkevičius | Victorian Decoded: Art And Telegraphy
  • A visitor to Tate Britain’s Paul Nash retrospective in front of his painting The Menin Road, 1918

    Paul Nash review – pain, wonder and inescapable menace

    Tate Britain, London
    Whether he’s painting the peaceful English countryside or the wartime trenches, the artist usually has something up his sleeve – and it’s not always pleasant
    • Paul Nash Tate Britain exhibition to feature 'lost' surrealist sculpture

    • Art Weekly newsletter
      South African creativity, Krasiński's illusions and Paul Nash's horrorscapes – the week in art

    • From English woodlands to war: the pioneering paintings of Paul Nash

May 2016

  • Illustration from Black Dog – the Dreams of Paul Nash by Dave McKean

    Black Dog: Dave McKean delves into the dreams of war artist Paul Nash – in pictures

  • Oh Dear, Ma Tutto Occupato (detail), by Georg Baselitz

    Five of the best… new art shows
    Five of the best… new art shows

April 2013

  • Paul Nash

    Exhibitionist
    Paul Nash, Anne Hardy, Tino Sehgal: the week's art shows in pictures

    From Paul Nash's intricate engravings in Chichester to Anne Hardy's installations in London, find out what's happening in art around the country

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