Religion and Sight - Louise Child

Religion and Sight - Louise Child

9. Sacred Landscapes, New Conversations: Paul Nash’s Visionary Paintings of the Wittenham Clumps

Religion and Sight - Louise Child

Molly Kady [+-]
Independent Scholar
Molly Kady has an MA in the Study of Religions from Winchester University where the focus of her dissertation was “A Critical Transformation of the Jewish soul from a Post-Patriarchal Perspective”. Her second MA in Art History from Birkbeck, London, included a study of medieval wall paintings in English parish churches and a dissertation “Owls, Apes and Gossips, the Othering of Jews and Women in the Fourteenth Century Misericords at Ely Cathedral”. As well as her current interest in the visionary landscape paintings of Paul Nash she is presently researching a project, “The Girl with the Goat and Other Animals: The Depiction of Synagoga in Medieval art”. Other current projects include “Portraying the Betrayer: Depictions of Judas Iscariot in Medieval art” and “Menagerie in Miniature: the animal iconography on Bishop Fox’s Chantry chapel (1513-18)”.

Description

From the inception of his work on the Wittenham Clumps (mammiform hills two miles North West of Wallingford in the Sinodun Range, Oxfordshire), Nash challenges his audience to see what is not there. He tests their immediate awareness and sensory appetite to search for the unseen. His art evokes the presence of elusive persons or forces which remain almost unknown and unidentified, even to himself, until shortly before his death. Many of Nash’s landscape paintings offer viewers a different way of looking at nature and objects within the natural world that became increasingly important to him. Although Nash did not like the term ‘spiritual’ applied to his work he struggled to find a term that paralleled it without sounding too religious. He may have fought against the terminology many applied to his work but if he had been around today I am certain he would have acknowledged, and probably liked the idea, that his landscapes were imbued with a Pagan spirit that he both saw and experienced, no more so than at Wittenham. This chapter traces Nash’s visual engagement with the Wittenham landscape as a case study. It explores his pictorial and physical interactions with this sacred landscape which shaped tools for interrogating a world beyond human sight. Following Nash, viewers are challenged and channelled into seeing the world and perhaps the “unseen” differently.

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Citation

Kady, Molly. 9. Sacred Landscapes, New Conversations: Paul Nash’s Visionary Paintings of the Wittenham Clumps. Religion and Sight. Equinox eBooks Publishing, United Kingdom. p. 160-181 Jul 2020. ISBN 9781781797495. https://www.equinoxpub.com/home/view-chapter/?id=35755. Date accessed: 25 Apr 2024 doi: 10.1558/equinox.35755. Jul 2020

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