by Christopher Campbell-Howes
is available to order online from:
448 pages, 301 illustrations. RRP £30
Men Stooking and Girls Learning to Stook 1940 Oil on canvas 29½ x 19 in. (75 x 49cm) Photograph: Richard Valencia ©Christopher Campbell-Howes. Private collection
In September 1940, in a letter accompanying a portfolio of new paintings to Ted Dickey, secretary of the War Artists' Advisory Committee, Evelyn wrote:
'...if there are very many more [paintings] than the number I agreed to let you have, as there will be in any case, shall I send them to you to see if you would want any for record purposes?'*
Throughout the war years Evelyn's contract with the War Artists' Advisory Committee (WAAC) was subject to frequent and unexpected change. Her initial contract, dating from her appointment in April 1940, was for 6 pictures of civilian women's organisations contributing to the war effort. She completed one (Putting on Anti-Gas Protective Clothing) and was working on another (A Knitting Party) when Dickey re-deployed her to recording the Women's Land Army in training. For this she was posted to Sparsholt Agricultural Institute, near Winchester, one of the regional training centres for Land Girls. Her contract was upped to include 10 paintings.
Although Evelyn had the freedom to depict whatever she felt was appropriate, it took some time for her to assess what the WAAC was looking for, hence her question to Dickey. The WAAC retained the right to refusal, which they seem to have exercised fairly frequently. Unquestioning acceptance of Evelyn's work was never the case. Among those canvases returned to her, and now mostly lost, were Introduction to the Tractor, Land Girl in Full Dress, Women Drivers Cleaning Party Cars (i.e. cars in the Sparsholt staff car pool), Carting Muck and our subject, Men Stooking and Girls Learning to Stook.
In a further letter to Dickey, dated 26 November 1940, Evelyn refers to it as the 'sketch of girls learning to stook', the implication being that the canvas was unfinished, but that she would complete it if the WAAC approved the sketch. They clearly did not, as it was returned to Evelyn, not to be seen again in public until 2011. Here it is again for reference:
This is the wheat harvest of 1940, in August or early September. At the time of painting (like its fully completed quasi-companion piece Threshing, Kent) Evelyn had finished her first stint at Sparsholt and was working up her sketches in her studio at home in north Kent. The setting isn't specified. It could be anywhere in Britain where the fields are as broad as the skies. The scene has no connection with Sparsholt: by harvest time Evelyn had left Hampshire. As a piece of wartime reportage, it might be said to fall short of the sort of accuracy that the occasion, and the War Artists' Advisory Committee (WAAC), demanded. There's no suggestion that the Battle of Britain might be raging overhead: the sky is reduced to a minimum, a blue-grey emptiness, no more than a foil to allow the wheatfield to have no apparent limits, an illustration of Evelyn's frequent referral to Nature's boundless generosity. Her war artist colleague Paul Nash saw the 1940 summer skies dramatically differently:
Text ©Christopher Campbell-Howes 2021. All rights reserved.
Would you like to read more?
Further discoveries of Evelyn's work in 2021 include Water-nymphomania (my title, in the absence of anything better), a piece unlike anything else in Evelyn's entire canon. No obvious documentation or circumstances survive, although a handful of sketches and other material which Evelyn kept together in a small portfolio until the end of her life may have some bearing on it. We'll look at these in a moment. As to what's going on in this orgiastic phantasmagoria, and what inspired it, various avenues are open to exploration.
Central to Evelyn's fantasy is the tree, with two hearts transpierced by an arrow, the initials E and ? and the date, 1928. On the right, isolated to give him a stronger presence, the god Pan plays the double flute, the aulos, an instrument sometimes associated with orgy in Greek legend. Apart from Pan, there are some 10 human figures in the picture, two water-nymphs, one with a fish tail (perhaps a Rusalka of eastern European legend), and one single foot in the top right-hand corner, sometimes Evelyn's preferred position for a sardonic comment, wry observation or even a joke. Of the identifiable figures, four appear to be male, five female and one, with brown tights and an orange top, is half-hidden and might be either. One of the females is mostly underwater, clinging to one of the water-nymphs, who has just dived in. The water is flowered with waterlilies, a symbol of purity. Four of the women have been injured and are bleeding from the mouth, temple or breast. In general the mostly unprepossessing male figures appear to be trying to escape up the tree. One is being prevented from escape by a water-nymph clinging to his ankle.
* * *
In the summer of 1928 Evelyn,
then 21, spent some time in Germany, having travelled there via Holland. She
designed - and initialled in a later style - a little map of the Dutch section
of the journey:
Crossing the North Sea, probably from Tilbury, she landed in Rotterdam, and went on from there to Utrecht and thence to Amsterdam. The map is entitled '2 days in Holland' so presumably she spent a night somewhere, perhaps Amsterdam, before retracing her steps to Utrecht and moving inland into the heart of Germany, as it was in 1928, if the direction of the last right-hand arrow is anything to go by. Perhaps accidentally, she has given Nederland, the Dutch name for Holland, its German spelling, Niederland. The map has some striking features: a facility with lettering, perhaps a result of some weeks of studying calligraphy at Chelsea College of Art a year or so earlier; and - most extraordinary - a heraldic shield notable for what appears to be, if it isn't an apple, an olive branch with an olive and, in the diagonally opposite quarter, a serpent. What is Eve-Evelyn trying to say?
Where was she going? There may be a clue in some rudimentary landscape sketches:This is a page torn from a cartridge paper sketch book, with an embossed stamp in the top right-hand corner reading 'Nr 27 Herkulesrauh', indicating a high quality German cartridge paper. The lower left-hand sketch appears to be of clouds, not very helpful in situating Evelyn's German destination; the lower-right hand features a distant tower in rolling countryside, too vague to be specific; the upper right-hand sketch is of a man-made hillock, surely, with a plain tower on the top; while the upper left-hand drawing, which includes a tower in some detail, seemed to promise more than the other three.
And so it turned out. I put the sketches round German friends and others with German contacts, with the reminder that Germany in 1928, as in the sketches, might not be the same as Germany in 2023: forests might have grown, or might have vanished; towers might have fallen or have been destroyed; later building might have intervened between subject and sketcher. Mostly blanks were drawn, until someone on Twitter (to whom many thanks if you read this!) identified the top right-hand tower as the Kaiser Wilhelmdenkmal in Kyffhäuser, a monument - one of many such towers, all different, spread over Germany - commemorating the Emperor Wilhelm, not Kaiser Bill of World War 1 but his grandfather, who died in 1888. Kyffhäuser was new to me, but a glance at the map showed it to be fairly close to Weimar, in 1928 the centre of the post-1918 German republic.
If this was where Evelyn was going, who was she going to see? Among the same small batch of sketches and documents was a pencil portrait:
This simple study in profile of a young man, apparently left-handed, shown drawing (rather than writing, taking into account the size of the paper), gives very little away. Who was he? How did Evelyn come to know him? In the absence of any other indication can we assume that they started off as pen-friends? Language appears to have been no problem: Evelyn's spoken German, studied at Rochester Grammar School for Girls, had earned her a special credit in the London General School Examination a few years earlier.
It's possible - but I'm unsure about this - that he resurfaced in Evelyn's consciousness nine years later, as a vignette in Gardeners' Choice, the innovative gardening book she wrote and illustrated in tandem with Cyril (Charles) Mahoney, her former Royal College of Art tutor and later lover. Is it the same man?
Vignette from Gardeners' Choice (Evelyn Dunbar and Cyril Mahoney: Routledge, London, 1937)
She was shortly to get to know him a great deal better. Another pencil sketch, on the same type of paper as the drawing above, was included in these documents.
Here he is asleep, dressed in the merest modesty garment. It was perhaps in preparation for moments of intimacy that in June 1928, before leaving for Holland and Germany, Evelyn painted an unusual self-portrait:
* * *
But something traumatic had happened, presumably not on the scale of Water-nymphomania with its Rusalka-like overtones, but wounding all the same. Afterwards Evelyn dropped everything German from her intellectual luggage. Even one or two songs by Franz Schubert that she loved, she sang thereafter in English. She never spoke of this adventure. Was some weeks' cohabitation with a German disapproved of by her family? Was there some post-war anti-German feeling, typically less marked among the younger generation? Otherwise the kindliest of men, was Ronald, the elder of her brothers, who had fought unscathed through World War 1 partly on the Western Front, scandalised by Evelyn's escapade? Had her parents demanded her return? She was 21, all the same, and able to make her own mind up. Many years later, in about 1958, she said to me that she had only known true depression once, and that was arriving once at Dover. As far as I knew she had never been abroad until the 1950s. I asked when this was. 'A long time ago now,' she replied. Maybe there was no connection.