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Kurt Schwitters at the Armitt 2

[ Alien at Ambleside ] [ Dr G A Johnston ] [ Merz Lives On ] [ Kurt Schwitters at the Armitt ] [ KS - An Appreciation by Russell Mills ] [ Newspaper Collages ] [ Wood on Wood ]
[ Kurt Schwitters at the Armitt 2 ] [ Kurt Schwitters at the Armitt 3 ] [ Kurt Schwitters at the Armitt 4 ]  [ Kurt Schwitters at the Armitt 5 ]  [ Kurt Schwitters at the Armitt 6 ] [ Kurt Schwitters Roadshow ] [ El Lissitsky ]

 


© Kurt und Ernst Schwitters Stiftung
Harry Pierce—Oil on board—1947—The Pierce Family

Harry Pierce was a landscape architect living in virtual retirement in Langdale. Schwitters painted this portrait seated beside one of his summerhouse sheds, about half a mile from his house at Chapel Stile. Harry had bought Cylinders Farm, a stretch of rough pasture and woodland a few years before and with two assistants was planting trees and shrubs from all parts of the world, contriving an Eden in the wilderness. It was a kind of horticultural Merz.

In Harry's words:

"I met Kurt Schwitters in the spring of 1947 after seeing a portrait he had painted of the late Dr. George Johnston exhibited in a shop window in Ambleside.  I asked Dr. Johnston who had painted his portrait and he told me a German artist staying in Ambleside, and he added: “the poor man has lost everything twice over, if you can help him at all - do.” 

"Still thinking of what the doctor had said and wondering if Schwitters would paint a portrait of myself, I walked once or twice past the house where he was lodging and Schwitters himself, a tall dark man with a sensitive face and strongly marked features, came out of his door and asked me if I was looking for anyone.  Somehow, this decided me and I went in, introducing myself and asked him if he would paint my portrait.  He agreed at once and we made all arrangements for him to come out to Langdale as he wished to work where I was busy forming a garden on a hillside near my home."

 


© Kurt und Ernst Schwitters Stiftung
Ida Pierce (unfinished) - oil on board—1947—The Pierce Family

KS was commissioned by Harry to paint a portrait of his wife Ida.   KS managed only one sitting of one hour - in Harry's words:

"But Schwitters was far from well: I asked him to paint a portrait of my wife and he came to my home and worked for about an hour. He laid down his brushes, said, “That is enough for today.”  It was his last stroke of work: and in two days he was dead in hospital in Kendal and was buried in Ambleside Churchyard."

Editor's note:  Harry wrote the above in 1965, his memory of the timescale is inaccurate and the last few days are catalogued by Gwendolen Webster as:
December 1947 week 3   Deteriorates rapidly, taken to Kendal hospital.
Christmas - Contracted bronchitis which developed into pneumonia.
 Lies in a morphine delirium, talks incoherently of Helma and Paris.
29th December - Moved to an annexe of the hospital.
7th January - Letter arrives at 4 Millans Park with formal approval of his request for British Citizenship.  Comatose by now for many days.
8th January 1948 - Passes away with Wantee and Ernst at his side.  Cause of death given as "Acute pulmonary oedema and myocarditis."

Schwitters needed all of his failing strength to try to complete the Merzbarn, sadly never finishing this portrait of Ida. The work is of major interest to students of KS’ work as an example of how he laid out the main structure of his portraits and as his final portrait. 

Both these portraits need to be seen live to get the full power of his works.  The garden to Harry's right and the Langdales in the background is an unusual part of  a KS portrait, but the addition can understood when you consider the rapport between these two men and what each was trying to achieve at Cylinders Farm.

[ Alien at Ambleside ] [ Dr G A Johnston ] [ Merz Lives On ] [ Kurt Schwitters at the Armitt ] [ KS - An Appreciation by Russell Mills ] [ Newspaper Collages ] [ Wood on Wood ]
[ Kurt Schwitters at the Armitt 2 ] [ Kurt Schwitters at the Armitt 3 ] [ Kurt Schwitters at the Armitt 4 ]  [ Kurt Schwitters at the Armitt 5 ]  [ Kurt Schwitters at the Armitt 6 ] [ Kurt Schwitters Roadshow ] [ El Lissitsky ]

 

 

[ Home ] [ How to find us ] [ Links ]
[ Armitt Collection ] [ Local People ] [ Opening Times ] [ Museum Shop ] [ News & Exhibitions ] [ How You Can Help ] [ The Learning Zone ] [ Friends of the Armitt ] [ History of Ambleside ]