William Roberts, R.A. (1895-1980)
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William Roberts, R.A. (1895-1980)

The Birth of Venus

Details
William Roberts, R.A. (1895-1980)
The Birth of Venus
signed 'William/Roberts.' (lower left)
oil on canvas
50 x 34 in. (127 x 86.4 cm.)
Painted in 1954.
Provenance
Purchased directly from the artist by Ernest Cooper Esq.
His sale; Sotheby's, London, 2 May 1990, lot 78 (£82,500).
Anonymous sale; Sotheby's, London, 19 June 1996, lot 47, where purchased by the present owner.
Literature
W. Roberts, Paintings 1917-1958, London, 1960, p. 55, illustrated.
Exhibited
London, Royal Academy, 1955, no. 594.
London, Tate Gallery, William Roberts Retrospective Exhibition, November - December 1965, no. 90: this exhibition travelling to Newcastle-upon-Tyne, Laing Art Gallery, January 1966; and Manchester, Whitworth Art Gallery, January - February 1966.
Southampton, Art Gallery, on loan 1967.
Worthing, Worthing Art Gallery, Paintings and Drawings by William Roberts, April - June 1972, no. 59.
Special Notice
Artist's Resale Right ("Droit de Suite"). Artist's Resale Right Regulations 2006 apply to this lot, the buyer agrees to pay us an amount equal to the resale royalty provided for in those Regulations, and we undertake to the buyer to pay such amount to the artist's collection agent.

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Lot Essay

The Birth of Venus, exhibited in 1955, was the fourth in a series of spectacular, eye-catching compositions by William Roberts that were to become a feature of Royal Academy Summer Exhibitions throughout the 1950s and '60s. Perhaps following the example of his Slade contemporary, Stanley Spencer - who had returned to exhibiting at the Royal Academy in 1950 - Roberts launched an assault on the mediocrity that too often characterised the R.A. summer shows at this time. While modestly scaled works diminished into insignificance on the packed walls of Burlington House, Roberts's colourful, uncompromising canvases certainly held their own. Neville Wallis, commenting on the 1955 show, bemoaned the generally restrained approach shown by many artists and found it very welcome to 'come upon the natural extravagances of a Spencer or a Roberts' (The Observer, 1 May 1955). The Times critic was disappointed by some of the 'subject paintings' on display but drew readers' attention to 'a vastly entertaining "Birth of Venus" by Mr. William Roberts' (30 April 1955).

In so far as Roberts's work was known in other contexts, it was for his representations of urban life. However, for the Royal Academy he often returned to the type of classical or biblical subjects that he had first been introduced to whilst at the Slade. His working year was now dominated by the production of a Royal Academy 'set piece'. The large canvas was preceded by detailed pencil and watercolour studies that were squared for transfer - a study for The Birth of Venus is in the Tate collection. It was audacious of Roberts to choose The Birth of Venus for the 1955 show - a subject so widely known through Sandro Botticelli's Renaissance masterpiece of 1486. Roberts retains Botticelli's blonde-haired vision of idealised female beauty, but in other respects his Venus is a more 'earthly' goddess. With little money available and no studio space, Roberts rarely hired professional models. For Venus, Roberts looked to a family friend, Daphne Dennison. Born in Jamaica, and later a student at the Slade School of Art, Daphne had met the Robertses in Oxford during the Second World War. She eventually made her home in London and became an exhibiting artist herself.

Roberts brings a satirical eye to the tale by placing the mythical apparition in the context of a down-to-earth Cypriot fishing scene, finding humour in the fishermen's reactions. The degree to which the subject matter would be regarded as risqué at the Royal Academy in 1955 can be seen in a comment by René MacColl in the Daily Express of 30 April 1955: 'There are going to be some very raised eyebrows among the crowds who visit the Academy, for never in its 187-year history have the nudes been quite so explicitly nude as they are this year even my blasé old jaw fell slightly agape once or twice as I made the rounds.' But The Birth of Venus was not among those singled out by MacColl.

William Roberts was elected an Associate of the Royal Academy in 1958 and a full member in 1966.

We are very grateful to David Cleall of the William Roberts Society for preparing this catalogue entry.

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