Girl in a Black Dress (c. 1915)
signed 'Dod Procter' (upper left) and inscribed with title (to back of stretcher)
oil and tempera on canvas
77 x 62cm
with an oil of a water fountain (verso)
ARR
Provenance
The present owner's grandparents; thence by descent;
Private collection, UK
We are grateful to Toby Procter who has confirmed the authenticity of this work.
Estimate: | £15,000 - £25,000 |
Hammer price: | £88,000 |
Catalogue note
A solitary seated female figure
gazes out past the viewer. Dressed in a medieval-esque black smock with a
bright lacquer-red cap which envelops her dark shoulder-length hair, the girl
crosses her arms and sits motionless, her piercing blue eyes staring into the
distance, her mind lost in thought and detached from the present. She sits in
front of a decorative pattern of flower motifs which adorns a panel of
wallpaper, tapestry or silk cloth, alongside a plain blue/grey wall. In the top left-hand
corner, the maker’s signature reads ‘Dod Procter’.
This newly discovered work by Dod
Procter (1890-1972), from a private collection, is truly remarkable as it
appears to be the earliest figurative work by the artist to have appeared on
the market in the last couple of decades. It provides a glimpse into Dod’s
early years as an artist, exploring and developing a visual vocabulary which
would then characterise her oeuvre from the 1920s. Only three other figurative works painted before 1920 by Dod, but which arguably post-date the present painting, are known to us in public collections: a portrait in oil from 1916 of her friend Sheelah Hynes (sister of the artist Gladys Hynes) at The Wolfsonian-Florida International University (Colour Magazine, June 1919), and two line drawings, one most certainly a preparatory sketch for the oil, at the Tate Archives (these are recto-verso on a sheet of paper and the second sketch, the figure wearing a hat, may be of Sheelah or Gladys). Another figurative work, The Charm, from this period was reproduced in Colour Magazine in December 1918.
The composition and subject are typical
of Dod’s more mature figurative work from the 1920s, which led to her rise to
fame in 1925 with The Model (exhibited at the RA in 1925) and
subsequently Morning (exhibited at the RA in 1927 and immediately
acquired for the nation by the Tate, where it is still held today), propelling
her to stardom and international acclaim. These works often depict the figure
positioned close-up at a three-quarter angle to the viewer and, viewed slightly
from above or sometimes from below, offer a sense of monumentality and
weightiness akin to sculpture. The sitter, as in the present work, if not
asleep, gazes into the void, the minimalist space and the various props
strategically placed beside her creating a possible accompanying narrative.
The presence of tempera in this
work with its transparent quality, most notably in the bodice, is evidence of
its early dating. We know from her letters to Ernest Procter, whom she married
in 1912, that during the 1910s Dod was experimenting and practising with
tempera, a medium which was experiencing a revival at the turn of the 20th
Century, promoted by critics such as Roger Fry and artists such as Marianne
Stokes, herself a member of the Newlyn School in the last decade of the 19th century. On occasion Dod would use tempera as a means of mapping out a colour
scheme before working on the final piece in oil. It would appear from the
present work that she also worked in mixed media, namely tempera and oil.
The bold lacquer-red pigment which Dod employed for the girl’s hat
attests to the dating of this work and a similar colour was used for a still
life entitled Poppies and Foxgloves (Modern British
and Irish Art Day Sale, Christie’s, London, 21st March 2024, lot 145), which Dod described during
its production in a letter to Ernest in 1917. The hat itself may be the one
later worn by Dod’s model Lillian in Girl with a Red Cap (1923) (Paintings Sale, Woolley
& Wallis, Salisbury, 21st March 2012, lot 249).
Dod exhibited nationally in group
exhibitions with, but not solely, the Royal Academy, WIAC (Women’s
International Art Club), Society of Women Artists, United Artists, Allied
Artists and in gallery shows such as the Leicester Galleries and Brook Street
Galleries. She also exhibited internationally with the British Artists’
Exhibition in Buenos Aires in 1928, the Venice Biennale from 1922 to 1930, the
Canadian National Exhibition, the Carnegie International in Pittsburgh from
1924 to 1935, in a solo show at the Carl Fischer Gallery New York in 1936 and a
solo show at the Carnegie in 1936-37, thereby gaining an international
clientele.
Greatly supported by the British
press, art journals and art critics, most notably Frank Rutter, the Francophile
and proponent of Post-Impressionism, Dod was an important and highly recognised
modernist painter and in 1942 became the second woman to be elected a Royal
Academician (Laura Knight being the first). Her paintings are now held in
important national and international institutions, such as the Tate and the Carnegie
Museum of Art in Pittsburgh.
Trained in Newlyn under the
auspices of Stephen and Elizabeth Forbes, who sought inspiration from the art
colonies in Brittany, Dod was part of the second generation of painters from
the Newlyn School and a key member of the Newlyn and Lamorna art colonies, her
artistic and social network counting among others Laura Knight, Gluck, Gladys
Hynes, Ernest Procter, Gertrude and Harold Harvey, Cedric Morris and AJ
Munnings.
We are grateful to Alexandra Kett-Baumann for her assistance with the cataloguing of this work and for preparing this catalogue note.
Condition Report
Original canvas with the basis of another composition (verso); approximately 1inch surface abrasion to the sitter's chest, lower right; smaller abrasions to background, lower left and to curtain, lower right; further scattered frame abrasions to each border; canvas visible to the upper left border; Ultraviolet reveals retouching to the sitter's forehead, cheeks and chin but these barely fluoresce and are therefore likely to be the artist's hand. Held in a modern composite gilt frame in fair condition.