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Pauline PlummerPauline Plummer (b.1933) - 20th Century Oil, Portrait of HarryUnknown
Unknown
$690
£526.28
€599.31
CA$969.66
A$1,057.55
CHF 560.22
MX$12,678.53
NOK 7,134.70
SEK 6,524.16
DKK 4,477.43
About the Item
This intimate portrait depicts a man with tousled brown hair and an introspective expression, rendered in loose, expressive brushstrokes. The subject is dressed in earth-toned clothing, including a brown vest over a light blue shirt, with the artist's painterly technique creating a sense of immediacy and emotional depth through visible brushwork and subtle colour variations.
Unsigned. Inscribed verso. On board.
- Creator:Pauline Plummer (1930 - 2023, British, English)
- Creation Year:Unknown
- Dimensions:Height: 19.69 in (50 cm)Width: 16.15 in (41 cm)
- Medium:
- Period:
- Condition:In fine condition.
- Gallery Location:Corsham, GB
- Reference Number:Seller: sr5531stDibs: LU881316758222
Studied Fine Art at Reading University and later became a painting conservator working extensively for the National Trust and other high profile clients specialising in the restoration of medieval works in-situ. As a painter she exhibited at the New English Arts Club, Royal Society Of British Artists, Royal Institute of Oil Painters and the Pastel Society as well as numerous commercial galleries.She lived in North Walsham Norfolk. This work with labels for the New English Arts Club exhibition of 1965.
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His first job in the theatre was creating masks for the Ballets Russes’ Zéphyr et Flore, 1925, designed by the French artist Georges Braque, followed by numerous musical revues for Cochran, including Wake Up and Dream!, 1929, with music by Cole Porter. It was during these revues, working with Porter and Noel Coward, that Oliver also began to design headdresses and costumes. In 1932 he was rewarded with his first full commission to design both costume and sets for Helen!, directed by Max Reinhardt. The production design is still celebrated today for its innovative approach and ground-breaking ‘white on white’ aesthetic, which referenced ‘Greek temples, Rococo drapes, Baroque colonnades and Louis XIV carousels’.
The success of Helen! led to further offers within the theatre including Reinhardt’s version of A Midsummer Night’s Dream at the Old Vic in 1937, starring Vivien Leigh as Titania and Robert Helpmann as Oberon, the Jean Cocteau play The Infernal Machine in 1940, and Christopher Fry’s translation of Jean Anouilh’s Ring Round the Moon, 1950.
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A production of Gabriel Pascal’s Caesar and Cleopatra, 1946, starring Vivien Leigh and Claude Rains, was celebrated for Oliver’s ability to recreate the opulence and luxury of ancient Egypt under the constraints of wartime rationing. Such was his skill that Vivien Leigh in a letter to Oliver declared that “I have of course told Pascal that nobody in the world must do the costumes except you.” He was later nominated for an Academy Award for his work on his final film Suddenly, Last Summer, 1959; an adaptation of Tennessee Williams’ American Southern Gothic mystery.
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