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Undergrowth

In this painting Warrener is preoccupied by the effect of light dappling through the trees to the undergrowth on the woodland floor. The young trees growing towards the light are surrounded by the rich undergrowth.

Although the use of paint is not so thick as in other works, the colours and textures again create the illusion of movement. Areas of the canvas have been left bare perhaps suggesting the rapid execution by the artist.

Oil on canvas 38.2x56 cms | Purchased by the museums and Galleries Commission/Victoria and Albert Museum Purchase Grant Fund, the Heslam Trust, Friends of Lincoln Museums and Art Gallery, 1993 | UG93/9

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About the Artist

William Tom Warrener (1861-1934)

William Warrener was a painter of portraits, nudes and landscapes, the second son of a coal merchant, who studied under A G Webster at Lincoln School of Art. In 1884 he received the Mayor of Lincoln’s Gold Medal and a Queens prize in the National Art Examinations at South Kensington. Circa 1885 he won a scholarship to the Slade School and also studied in Paris at the ‘Academie Julian’. In Paris he was friendly with William Rothenstein and Henri Toulouse Lautrec, who painted his portrait. He was the model for Lautrec’s famous poster ‘L’Anglais au Moulin Rouge’ and figures in the poster ‘Jane Avril Dansant’. Warrener spent sometime in Paris but following his brother’s death returned to Lincoln to continue the family coal business. He was founder member of the Lincoln Drawing Club 1906 and first president of the Lincolnshire Artist’s Society, which formed in 1930. His earlier works were rather academic, but from his time in Paris he painted in an Impressionist style.

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