© The estate of Helen Saunders

Helen Saunders 1885–1963



Helen Saunders, 1885-1963
Brigid Peppin
Ashmolean Museum

"Since Saunders' early work earned her a respected place in experimental circles, the gathering obscurity of her later years seems cruel. She endured the neglect with uncomplaining stoicism, for her innate warmth prevented her from succumbing to bitterness. All the same, I am delighted that her entire career is now receiving the attention it deserves. Peppin should be congratulated on her success in discovering a great deal of fascinating information about Saunders' life and work, as well as sharing in an exhibition which does her justice at last." -- Taken from the Foreword by Richard Cork.
This exhibit catalogue is currently difficult to find, but it's worth trying to track it down if you're a fan of Helen Saunders.  As a family member, Brigid Peppin has access to personal, family information about Saunders.  As an artist herself, Peppin is a knowledgable and sympathetic curator of Saunders' works.

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from The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography:

Helen Beatrice Saunders (1885–1963) was born on 4 April 1885 at 10 Addison Road, Bedford Park, Chiswick, London, the daughter of Alfred Robert Henry Saunders, a solicitor, and his wife, Annie, née Daley. After being educated at home, Saunders studied at the Central School of Arts and Crafts and at the Slade School of Fine Art (1906–7), and exhibited with the Friday Club in 1912. By then her interest in post-impressionism was evident, and she showed her work at the Allied Artists' Association in 1912 and 1913.

One of the first in Britain to work in a non-figurative style, Saunders reached her most extreme stage as a painter in 1914 when she exhibited at the Whitechapel Art Gallery's ‘Twentieth Century Art’ exhibition and joined the Rebel Art Centre. Like Dismorr, she contributed a poem as well as an illustration to the second issue of Blast, and was included in the vorticist exhibitions in London and New York. But she came closest to Lewis when together they painted murals in the Vorticist Room at the Restaurant de la Tour Eiffel, Percy Street, London. At the end of her life Saunders was living at 39 Gray's Inn Road, Holborn, London. Following her accidental death by gas poisoning on new year's day, 1963, three of her works—Monochrome Abstract Composition (c.1915), Abstract Composition in Blue and Yellow (c.1915), and Abstract Multicoloured (c.1915)—were that year presented to the Tate Gallery in memory of her sister by Ethel M. Saunders.



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© Estate of Frederick Etchells
Helen Saunders photographed by
Frederick Etchells c.1916
via The Tate Museum



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© The estate of Helen Saunders

Abstract Composition in Blue and Yellow,
c.1915, Pencil, chalk, wash and collage within irregularly
shaped pencil frame, approx 10 7/8×6 3/4 (27·5×17)

Collection Tate, Presented by Miss Ethel M.Saunders
 in memory of her sister 1963.

via The Tate Museum

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© The estate of Helen Saunders

Abstract Multicoloured Design,  c.1915
Medium Gouache, watercolour, and graphite
on paper. Dimensions Support: 359 x 257 mm
Collection Tate, Presented by Miss Ethel M.
Saunders in memory of her sister 1963.

via The Tate Museum

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Left:
A drawing of Helen Saunders by Wyndham Lewis

from: Helen Saunders: A Little Gallery

via the blog of artist Richard A Warren
richardawarren.wordpress.com
contains many other images of Saunders' paintings.
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For a list of a few other art historical references and video
lectures on women artists and modernism including the Vorticists, see our refernce page:

http://www.flashpointmag.com/women_vorticists.htm




 


Female Figures Imprisoned


© The estate of Helen Saunders
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c. 1913
ink & watercolor on paper
15.6 x 18.6 cm


listed in:
Helen Saunders, 1885-1963
by Brigid Peppin
Ashmolean Museum



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© The estate of Helen Saunder
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gouache




listed in:
Helen Saunders, 1885-1963
by Brigid Peppin
Ashmolean Museum



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Below: Helen Saunders poem
A Vision of Mud
 from BLAST 2 via the Modernist Journals Project







Click through the image left to go to
TateShots:

Biddy Peppin on the Female Vorticists


Art historian Brigid Peppin talks about her relative, the female Vorticist Helen Saunders as well as her little-known colleagues Jessica Dismorr and Dorothy Shakespear.

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Images © Estate of Helen Saunders

A wonderful internet resource for
Helen Saunders is:

Helen Saunders: A Little Gallery

on the blog of artist Richard A Warren

richardawarren.wordpress.com

contains, images, texts and items of interest on other vorticists and artists of the time


Saunders friend Katie Gliddon and her teacher Rosa Waugh were both imprisoned for
the suffrage cause.  Below is a group portrait that depicts Rosa Waugh.




Portrait depicts:
Rosa Waugh, Winifred John, Michael Salaman, Augustus John and Gwen John.
Portrait Group (Recto) Studies after Michelangelo (Verso) by Gwen John, 1897–1898
Watercolour & pencil Dimensions: 28 x 38 cm


www.artfund.com


 FlashPøint Magazine: a Journal of the Arts & Politics - Issue #17  / www.flashpointmag.com

FlashPoint Magazine - Issue #17