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Artworks

Marion Adnams (1898-1995), The Twins, 1955

Marion Adnams (1898-1995)

The Twins, 1955
Tempera on panel
17 x 21 in. (43 x 53 cm)
Signed and dated 1955, inscribed on the reverse with Lewis Carroll's Hunting of the Snark: 'In winter or summer, 'twas always the same—. You could never meet either alone'.
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From her earliest work, Adnams played with discrepancies of scale and the creation of unlikely narratives in a surrealist way. She recorded that 'When I first went to see René...
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From her earliest work, Adnams played with discrepancies of scale and the creation of unlikely narratives in a surrealist way. She recorded that 'When I first went to see René Magritte at the Tate I saw him for the first time and I nearly passed out. So often the same thought had been with me".

 

In 1930, Adnams started attending life classes at Derby School of Art. She was gratified to find her natural ability to draw recognised, though perhaps less so in the terms her talent was acknowledged, with one teacher remarking, 'she drew like a man, direct, with no rubbing out'. The ornamental dogs featured in this painting were from Adnams' own collection of Staffordshire pottery. A study of this work exists which shows the artist added a piece of paper to the left-hand side, suggesting that having at first intended to draw only one of the pair, Adnams felt a compulsion to unite it with its twin.

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Provenance

Private Collection, London

Literature

Llewellyn, Sacha, et al. Women Only Works on Paper. Liss Llewellyn, 2021, p. 76.

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