Aided by insights from the artist's own evocative writings, this is the first comprehensive overview of a highly prolific, yet relatively unknown, twentieth-century British painter: David Gommon.
Born into a working-class family in London''s Battersea, David Gommon first studied art at the local Polytechnic when he was sixteen. Aged nineteen, he was taken up by Lucy Carrington Wertheim - the London-based gallerist renowned for adventurously showing work by Christopher Wood, Frances Hodgkins and gifted naive artists - who gave him his first exhibition. Aided by insights from the artist''s own evocative writings, Philip Vann''s text intricately examines the development of Gommon''s predominantly landscape art - infused with mystical delicacy of colour and subtle audacity of composition that often tends towards surrealism - rooted latterly in the paradisical surroundings of the Northamptonshire village of Hardingstone where he and his wife Jean lived for several decades.