Works Beach with Bathers

Beach with Bathers

1969

oil on board

40.7h x 122w (cm)

Tate Britain

Recto: signed and dated lower right: R. Eurich’ 69'

Alternatives:
Beach with Bathers [Tate] , Beach with Bathers (Frieze) [Tooths], Beach Scene with Figures [Bradford]
Bathers on Beach (Frieze) [RE sales diary]

Tags:
All Works in Public Collections
Figures on a Beach
Gatherings / Festivities
Motifs
Nudes
Panoramas
Problem Pictures
Sets
Ships / Boats / Harbours
Themes
Towels
Umbrellas / Hats

Subject
Baby
Beach
Coast
Leisure
Nude
Paint
Panoramic
Sea
Tate
adults
arab
asian
bathers
bathing hut
bed
black
boats
crowd
dinghy
ethnic
family
figure with a towel
figure with towel over head
freighter
frieze
group
groups
hat
holiday
kite
man
oars
oil
panorama
picnic
public collection
rowing boat
sea fort
seafort
ship
ships
shore
sleeping
string
sunbather
sunbathing
surreal
swimmers
swimming
tail
tankers
tent
towels
vacation

Medium
Oil

This is a wonderful coming together of so many elements from Richard’s experience. The central ‘arch’ formed by the figures in a rather  awkward dance are part of the line of pillar-like people at intervals along the shore. In the sea are a multitude of writhing figures in all sorts of poses and activities which give animation to the formal design completed by the calmness of the tankers on the horizon.

- REP / PB

"Richard Eurich has been interested in the sea and the sea shore as subjects for painting since as a youth he visited the Chesil Bank while on holidays with cousins at Weymouth. There he learnt to make notes and drawings which could be used years later as a basis for making oil paintings. Eurich has lived at Dibden Purlieu in the New Forest since 1934 and has on occasions visited Lepe, on the Solent, where oil tankers pass on their way to or from the nearby oil refinery at Fawley. Eurich painted ‘Beach with Bathers’ at his studio in Dibden Purlieu, from imagination, though he ‘probably’ consulted drawings, made perhaps years before, of ships and the shore. He has from time to time used a panoramic format for pictures, in which the width of the work may be more than twice the height of the work. He first used this format in two paintings of 1937, "Mousehole Harbour, Cornwall", 24 × 65in., now in the Aberdeen Art Gallery, and "Porthleven, Cornwall", [aka " Low Tide, Porthleven"], 19 × 69 1/2in., in the National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne (NGV)."

- Tate Website

Addenda to the above extract:

  • There was actually a third panorama done in 1937, "Constantine, Cornwall" and they were all exhibited together in his solo show at the Redfern Gallery in 1938.
  • We have discovered that Richard used the panorama format as early as 1918, but the 1938 show does seems to be a turning point, because he began from that exhibition to choose the format regularly, using it for over 150 works by the end of his career.
- REP

Provenance & Events

SOLO SHOW • 29th Sep to 16th Oct 1970

"Richard Eurich - Recent Paintings"

Arthur Tooth & Sons

Cat 9

Priced at £450
EXHIBITION • 1st May to 25th Jul 1971

"Summer Exhibition 1971"

Royal Academy of Arts

Cat 92

ACQUIRED • 1971

Bought by the Trustees of the Chantrey Bequest from the RA exhibition

SOLO SHOW • 25th Nov 1979 to 20th Jan 1980

"Richard Eurich, RA - A Retrospective Exhibition"

Cartwright Hall Gallery, Bradford District Museums and Galleries

Cat 71

GIFTED • 1981

Tate Britain

Presented by the Trustees of the Chantrey Bequest to Tate Britain

EXHIBITION • 27th May to 31st Oct 2021

References:

Books

  • "The Art of Richard Eurich"; Andrew Lambirth, pub. 2020: Lund Humphries, 170 colour illustrations, ISBN 9781848221727 [fig 97, pg 119]

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