Bernard Evans Home | Links | CV | Q&A | Privacy | Contact Us
 
click here to view

Eadweard Muybridge at Tate Britain, review 09-Sep
Romantics at Tate Britain, review 09-Sep
iPod girl voted best portrait 09-Sep
Poussin: what the nation stands to lose 09-Sep
Damien Hirst to feature in new Royal Academy exhibition 09-Sep
Andrei Maynard, Bradley Bryant & Thomas Mcguire playing Call of Duty 4, 2008 - Robbie Cooper: Immersion 09-Sep
Breakfast at Windsor: by an artist with inside knowledge 04-Sep
Sweat and breath damaging Sistine Chapel's frescoes 04-Sep
Impressionist Gardens at the National Galleries of Scotland, review 04-Sep
Corinne Day: 'Be proud of holes in your jumper’ 04-Sep
Sir Terence Conran: Modernism’s shining knight 04-Sep
Doll Face at the V&A Museum of Childhood 04-Sep
Romantics at Tate Britain, review 03-Sep
Let there be Sculpture! New Art Centre, Roche Court, review 03-Sep
Damien Hirst faces new plagiarism claims 03-Sep
Christies to exhibit Kazakh art 03-Sep
Romantics, at Tate Britain 29-Aug
Lending works of art to France is a risky business, warns curator 29-Aug
British Museum evacuated in 'gas incident' 29-Aug
Grace Robertson, interview with the 1950s photojournalist 29-Aug
Stanhope Forbes painting saved 26-Aug
The Language of Line at the Royal Academy, review 26-Aug
Martin Creed at the Fruitmarket Gallery, Edinburgh, review 26-Aug
Raphael's Sistine tapestries at the V&A: bring back hanging 26-Aug
Posters that lost the plot 26-Aug
Egypt arrests deputy culture minister over Van Gogh theft 26-Aug
Recession? What recession? 26-Aug
The Language of Line at the Royal Academy, review 23-Aug
Lehman Brothers art auction offers glimpse into the secret world of corporate collecting 23-Aug
Egon Schiele artwork stolen by Nazis returned to Austria 23-Aug
  more news
   
 
 
click here to view

Artist Reports

Reports
 

Martin Bloch 1883–1954 - Artist Biography 2008-Nov-17

Martin Bloch
1883-1954

Anglo-German Expressionist painter. Born 17 November 1883 in Neisse, Silesia.

First studied the violin, then architecture; finally art at Munich under Wölfflin 1905 and at Berlin under Corinth and George Mosson. First one-man show at the Paul Cassirer Gallery, Berlin, 1911. Worked in Paris 1912; visited Spain 1913 and again there 1914–18, stranded by the war, working with Pascin. Retrospective exhibition at the Paul Cassirer Gallery 1920; exhibited with the Expressionists in Berlin and elsewhere in Germany 1920–33. Ran an art school in Berlin 1923–33, first with Anton Kerschbaumer, then from 1926 with Schmidt-Rottluff; spent most summers in Italy with pupils 1924–30. Left Germany 1933, spending a year in Denmark before settling in England; naturalized British subject 1947. Ran an art school with Roy de Maistre 1936–9. First English one-man shows at Cambridge and Oxford 1938; also exhibited at the A.I.A., the London Group and the Ben Uri Art Gallery. Painted mainly in London, Dorset and Wales from 1939. Visited America 1948, teaching at Minneapolis and exhibiting there and at Princeton. Travelling exhibition in western Canada 1952–3. Died 19 June 1954 in London. Memorial exhibitions at the Beaux Arts Gallery 1955, Arts Council, London and tour 1957, German travelling exhibition 1958, Kaplan Gallery 1959 and Ben Uri Gallery 1963.

   

Published in:
Mary Chamot, Dennis Farr and Martin Butlin, The Modern British Paintings, Drawings and Sculpture, London 1964  
www.tate.org.uk

Martin Bloch was a British painter and teacher of German birth. The son of a Jewish factory-owner, Bloch studied architecture in Berlin in 1902, aesthetics with Heinrich W?lfflin in Munich in 1905 and drawing with Lovis Corinth in Berlin in 1907. As a painter he was largely self-taught. His first one-man exhibition (1911) took place at the Paul Cassirer Gallery, Berlin. In 1912 he went to Paris, where he worked in Montparnasse and became a friend of Jules Pascin. The years 1914-18 were spent in Spain. In 1923 he founded the Bloch-Kerschbaumer school in Berlin with Anton Kerschbaumer, whose place was later taken by Karl Schmidt-Rottluff. In 1933 Bloch was declared a 'degenerate artist' by the Nazis, and in 1934 he fled with his family to Denmark, and thence to London, where, with Roy de Maistre, he opened his School of Contemporary Painting. In later years he taught at Camberwell School of Art.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Bretonische Küstenlandschaft 1907

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Survival 1943

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Blackmore Vale

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Wales

Wales

 

     

Martin Bloch was born in November 1883 in Neisse, Silesia/Poland (then Germany). His father owned a lace & linen factory. Martin died in exile in London in 1954. From 1902 to 1905 he studied architecture and art at the University of Berlin; in 1905 he studied aesthetics in Munich, returning to Berlin in 1907 to attend drawing classes with Lois Corinth. During WW1 he lived in Spain. In 1923 he opened the Bloch-Kerschbaumer School of Painting in Berlin, which became very popular with students from all over Europe. When Kerschbaumer died in 1926, Karl Schmidt-Rottluf took his place. In 1933 he had a disagreement with the Nazi administration over an exhibition and promptly was declared a painter of "Degenerate Art". A year later he was forced to leave Germany and emigrated with his wife and daughter to Britain. In 1947 he became a British citizen. His contact with Wales came about through Josef Herman. Bloch paints in Bethesda, North Wales in the 1940s and 1950s.
His influences were Max Liebermann and Lovis Corinth.

Initially, Bloch studied music and architecture (subjects which reoccured repeatedly in his paintings), then opted for art studying in Munich and Berlin notably with Lovis Corinth. His life as a painter spanned three distinct periods. From 1914 to 1919 he lived and worked in Spain where he painted one of his favourite subjects, i.e. the human figure in a landscape setting, in this case washerwomen and workers planting and treading grapes. From 1920 to 1933 he was based in Berlin, periodically travelling to Italy, e.g. Venice & Lake Garda. There, apart from architectural paintings and scenes around Lake Garda, he depicted fishermen and workers in the silk industry. As Grove's Dictionary of Art (p.143) states: "In 1933 Bloch fled to Britain when he was declared a degenerate artist by the Nazis. In London, with Roy de Maistre, he opened his School of Contemporary Painting...Later he taught at Camberwell School of Art. Although he shared the heightened palette & injectivity of the German Expressionists his lyrical humanism & classical sense of composition allied him with the modern French tradition". Bloch's association with the Expressionists included Karl Schmidt-Rottluff with whom he shared the running of an art school in Berlin. The latter had taken over from Anton Kerschbaumer who died in 1931. At the time he was also connected to 'Die Bruecke'. On his way to Britain he spent a year in Denmark where he met and interacted with Bertold Brecht. His host & friend in Denmark was the author Karin Michaelis; their correspondence is preserved among her papers at the Royal Library in Copenhagen. Eventually, Bloch settled in London where he primarily painted London scenes. He earned his living by teaching. One of the distinguished students at his art school in London in the mid-1930s was Heinz Koppel, who had also left Berlin for Britain in 1936 (Peter Lord, 'Industrial Society' p.236). Bloch travelled widely in North America, i.e. 1948 in the USA where he taught for a while in Minneapolis and Princeton, 1952 in Canada where a travelling exhibition of his work was held.

In 1944 Martin Bloch met Josef Herman, another emigré painter from the Continent. Between 1947 & 1954 Bloch repeatedly visited Wales, especially Herman in Ystradgynlais with whom he shared an exhibition at the Ben Uri Gallery in London in 1949. He also travelled to Llandudno, Bangor & Bethesda on a number of occasions. This led to a group of paintings (9 in all) depicting the Welsh landscape and the human figure in that particular landscape setting such as quarrymen in North Wales and coal miners in South Wales.


Bloch was a master of technique, a brilliant colourist inspired by a personal relationship with the medium itself. He mistrusted the posturing of art groups and 'movements' and, along with the fragmented nature of his personal life history, remained somewhat apart from the fashionable rush towards abstraction in contemporary Britain at the time. The paintings he produced during the last seven years of his life were often worked and reworked over several years and their completion dates in some cases extended to a number of years after their original conception. Thus, in several of the pictures conceived in Wales, the date of the visit and the date of the finished work may be many years apart. For example, "Welsh Village" which was originally purchased by the Arts Council of Wales and which is now held by the Brecknock Museum & Art Gallery in Brecon, was given its title in 1955, after the artist's death, when it was shown for the first time. Other paintings from his Welsh period are: 1947 'Bangor at Nightfall' at the National Gallery of Norway in Oslo; 1950 'Down from Welsh Quarries' held by the Arts Council of England; 1950/1 'Down from the Bethesda Quarries' at the National Galleries of Wales in Cardiff; 1952/54 'Afternoon in Bangor' at Tate Britain in London; 'Slate Heaps in North Wales' (date unknown) in the Bloch family collection.

Commissions: The painting "Down From Bethesda Quarry" for the 'Festival of Britain' exhibition in 1951 (now at the National Galley of Wales Cardiff) and others.

International Links:
public collections abroad=Berlinische Gallery Berlin/Germany; Museum der Stadt Berlin/Germany; Kronprinzen Palais Berlin/Germany; Kunsthalle Hamburg/Germany; Leo Beck Institute New York/USA; Busch Reisinger Museum, Harvard University/USA; National Gallery of Art Washington DC/USA; Princetown University Museum/USA; San Francisco Museum of Art/USA; Musee Cinematheque Paris/France; Museum of Tel Aviv/Israel; National Gallery of Canada; National Gallery of Norway;

exhibitions abroad=many before 1934; 1948 Walker Art Centre Minneapolis USA, 1952 Brit.Travel.Exhib.Canada, 1958 Kunstkabinet Frankfurt etc, posthumous touring exhibition through Germany;

Represented in all major permanent collections in Britain, and in many in the USA and Germany.

www.artinwales.250x.com

 

MARTIN BLOCH EXHIBITION

Martin Bloch   8 December 2008 - 7 March 2009
MOMA WALES
Y Tabernacl
Heol Penrallt
Machynlleth
Powys SY20 8AJ
Tel  01654 703355

The most recent opportunity to see the work of Martin Bloch 1883-1954 was a retrospective held at the Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts, University of East Anglia: and this eye opening event ( in 2007-8) made abundantly clear how important Bloch's late period was. For this reason it is particularly appropriate that the current exhibition of Bloch's paintings and drawings concentrates on his output from between 1945 and1954.

Martin Bloch, was a very well travelled man, his oeuvre spans Spain, Italy, Germany, France, Denmark, and the USA, as well as England and Wales.

Bloch dedicated his life solely to teaching art and painting. Before the beginning of World War II Bloch fled Berlin to escape Nazi persecution and settled in London, where he reopened his private art school. Bloch survived the Blitz, and internment as an enemy alien on the Isle of Mann, and in the last years leading up to his death, in 1954, he taught at Camberwell School of Art in London.

Towards the end of his life Bloch worked in both North and South Wales : and MOMA, Wales, at Machynlleth, offers an ideal setting, in its position at a mid point between these two locations. 

Bloch became deeply imbued in the atmosphere Welsh landscape, particularly around   Bangor which he first visited in 1947. In the early 50's he came to  Ystradginlais, to visit his friend, Joseph Herman and in 1951 Bloch contributed a large Welsh subject painting, Down From Bethesda Quarry (National Gallery of Wales, Cardiff) to the Festival of Britain exhibition.


 Both aspects of his painting style and his single minded approach to being an artist, had some considerable influence on a generation of Welsh painters, the most notable of which was Peter Prendergast.


The selection of drawings and canvasses at the Tabernacl concentrates on the late period of Bloch's work; the exhibition shows his consummate skill as a colourist and also, with the Welsh drawings, provides a fascinating insight into how Wales and Welsh life was seen through this truly European artist's eyes.


Peter Rossiter (artist/curator )

 
Bangor at nightfall
 

Estuary of the river Dee
 

 

 

 
London Cityscape
Click on image to view full gallery
 
Cornish Landscapes
Click on image to view full gallery
 
Cornish Life
Click on image to view full gallery
 
Other
Click on image to view full gallery
Home | Links | CV | Q&A | Privacy | Contact Us
Copyright © 2008 BernardEvans.co.uk. All Rights Reserved.