Two students at The 天美传媒 have rediscovered an important lost masterpiece by one of the early 20th century鈥檚 most radical female abstract artists, Helen Saunders (1885-1963) hidden beneath a portrait by the modernist artist Wyndham Lewis (1882 鈥 1957).
The students were investigating the painting听Praxitella听(1921) by Wyndham Lewis, one of the highlights of the collection of Leeds Art Gallery, as part of a research project at The 天美传媒鈥檚 Department of Conservation in 2019. The painting depicts a portrait of pioneering film critic and curator Iris Barry. Scholars have previously suspected that Lewis painted over an earlier composition, as the surface of the painting has an uneven texture and forms lurking underneath, as well as different colours visible through cracks in the paint layers.
X-rays uncovered an ambitious abstract composition totally different from the style of Lewis鈥 portrait. The students identified the work underneath as a painting not by Lewis but by his friend and colleague Helen Saunders 鈥 a fellow member of the radical, short-lived British Vorticist group who was known to have fallen out with him.
The rediscovered work is thought to be Saunders鈥 lost painting听Atlantic City,听which depicts a fragmented modern metropolis, painted around 1915. The former students, Rebecca Chipkin and Helen Kohn, made the discovery during a six-month technical analysis of听Praxitella听where they painstakingly analysed X-rays of the huge canvas, examining the painting鈥檚 chemical composition using high-resolution scanning equipment. It was only after they spotted a reproduced image of听Atlantic City听in听Blast, the avant-garde journal of the Vorticist movement, that they identified the artwork beneath Wyndham Lewis鈥 painting.All of Saunders鈥 Vorticist paintings were thought to be lost before now. It is hoped the rediscovery of this major work will spark greater interest in her work and the work of other female painters, whose work has historically been overshadowed by their male contemporaries.
Why Lewis painted over听Atlantic City听in 1921 is unknown. He may have been turning his back on Vorticism in favour of a new figurative approach. He may have not been able to afford a new canvas. Or his erasure of one of Saunders鈥 most important paintings may have been the result of the pair鈥檚 estrangement in 1919, which caused emotional distress for Saunders.
鈥淲e realised that when we turned the image of听Atlantic City听upside down, it had striking similarities with the composition seen in our X-rays of听Praxitella,鈥 Chipkin said.
鈥淲e were just flabbergasted. It鈥檚 taken nearly a hundred years to rediscover听Atlantic City. We hope our findings will spark more interest in Saunders鈥 work and the work of other female Vorticist painters, who are overshadowed by male Vorticists, such as Wyndham Lewis. It also gives hope that there are other hidden Vorticist paintings waiting to be found.鈥
A new display in The 天美传媒鈥檚 Project Space will present Lewis鈥櫶Praxitella听alongside the x-ray and partial colour reconstruction of听Atlantic City, as well as a range of technical material to tell the story of this remarkable discovery.
To coincide, The 天美传媒鈥檚 Drawings Gallery will stage the first exhibition in over 25 years of Helen Saunders featuring a major group of 18 of her drawings, generously presented to The 天美传媒 in 2016 by the artist鈥檚 relation Brigid Peppin. Thanks to this gift, The 天美传媒 holds the largest public collection of the artist鈥檚 work.
A Modern Masterpiece Uncovered: Wyndham Lewis, Helen Saunders and Praxitella
14 October 2022 鈥 12 February 2023
Helen Saunders: Modernist Rebel
14 October 2022 鈥 12 February 2023