Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Eric Gill and the Contemporary
View through CrossRef
When I was an undergraduate in the early 1950s Eric Gill was a minor cult figure among Catholics whom I knew. As an apologist, a social, political and aesthetic theoretician rather than anything else. Gill’s lettering in stone was something I had learnt to admire at Ampleforth where Dom Patrick Barry was at that time active in calligraphy and lettering in stone himself. I liked Father Patrick’s work a lot and he introduced me to Gill’s. There was a certain general keenness about Gill at Ampleforth then but I only got to his Letters and Autobiography as an undergraduate. In those days Gill and Maritain and St Thomas and Belloc and Chesterton were good company. In a dilettante, amateur way I enjoyed myself among them. As far as Gill was concerned I was particularly pleased with him and myself for discovering him in his First Nudes and 25 Nudes. I had liked Gill’s apologia in his Autobiography for sensuality in giving proper appreciation to God for His ways in His creation, and I liked his nudes. For all their occasional clumsiness and maladroitness of balance and proportion, I still do. I find it particularly a matter of regret that Gill’s deliberate erotic work is still under so much prurient lock and key at the Victoria and Albert and the British museums. When will the English grow up?Gill’s more steamy and obsessive side, his sexy nudes and ex- ultance in sensual experience and joys, appealed more to me than to some of my Catholic friends, and than much of his polemic argumentativeness. Some of the more arty side of my family were enthusiasts for Gill’s way of life via personal acquaintanceship with David Jones and I found that rather tedious. Gill began to smack of affectation and moral-art snobbery at about the time I stopped being an undergraduate and went into National Service.
Title: Eric Gill and the Contemporary
Description:
When I was an undergraduate in the early 1950s Eric Gill was a minor cult figure among Catholics whom I knew.
As an apologist, a social, political and aesthetic theoretician rather than anything else.
Gill’s lettering in stone was something I had learnt to admire at Ampleforth where Dom Patrick Barry was at that time active in calligraphy and lettering in stone himself.
I liked Father Patrick’s work a lot and he introduced me to Gill’s.
There was a certain general keenness about Gill at Ampleforth then but I only got to his Letters and Autobiography as an undergraduate.
In those days Gill and Maritain and St Thomas and Belloc and Chesterton were good company.
In a dilettante, amateur way I enjoyed myself among them.
As far as Gill was concerned I was particularly pleased with him and myself for discovering him in his First Nudes and 25 Nudes.
I had liked Gill’s apologia in his Autobiography for sensuality in giving proper appreciation to God for His ways in His creation, and I liked his nudes.
For all their occasional clumsiness and maladroitness of balance and proportion, I still do.
I find it particularly a matter of regret that Gill’s deliberate erotic work is still under so much prurient lock and key at the Victoria and Albert and the British museums.
When will the English grow up?Gill’s more steamy and obsessive side, his sexy nudes and ex- ultance in sensual experience and joys, appealed more to me than to some of my Catholic friends, and than much of his polemic argumentativeness.
Some of the more arty side of my family were enthusiasts for Gill’s way of life via personal acquaintanceship with David Jones and I found that rather tedious.
Gill began to smack of affectation and moral-art snobbery at about the time I stopped being an undergraduate and went into National Service.
Related Results
Your Affectionate Son in St Dominic Eric Gill T.S.D.
Your Affectionate Son in St Dominic Eric Gill T.S.D.
Thus did Eric Gill sign his letters to Bede Jarrett, the English Dominican Provincial between the wars. I hope to show that he was saying something true about himself.But it is pre...
Matthew Philip Gill and Joseph Smith: The Dynamics of Mormon Schism
Matthew Philip Gill and Joseph Smith: The Dynamics of Mormon Schism
In 2007, Matthew Philip Gill, a resident of Derbyshire, England, announced the formation of the Latter Day Church of Jesus Christ. He claimed to be acting under angelic direction, ...
Gill diseases in marine salmon aquaculture with an emphasis on amoebic gill disease.
Gill diseases in marine salmon aquaculture with an emphasis on amoebic gill disease.
Abstract
Gill diseases are a growing health challenge in salmon farming worldwide, but many gaps remain in our knowledge. Gill diseases are generally complex...
Identification of signalling pathways involved in gill regeneration in zebrafish
Identification of signalling pathways involved in gill regeneration in zebrafish
ABSTRACT
The occurrence of regeneration of the organs involved in respiratory gas exchange amongst vertebrates is heterogeneous. In aquatic anima...
The Art of Mr. Eric Gill
The Art of Mr. Eric Gill
Two recent reviews of Mr. Eric Gill’s latest book, Art Nonsense, make us think that it is time Mr. Gill’s art was discussed from the point of view of his own writings and the Thomi...
Gill, Eric (1882–1940)
Gill, Eric (1882–1940)
Eric Gill was a sculptor, typeface designer, printmaker and craftsman associated with the Arts and Crafts movement whose greatest influence was on the development of modern British...
Bir Hiper-Kalvinist Olarak John Gill
Bir Hiper-Kalvinist Olarak John Gill
Hiper-Kalvinizm, Protestan teolojisinin kurtuluş ile ilgili yaklaşımının biraz daha ileri versiyonudur. Hiper-Kalvinizm, Mesih’in kefaretinin yeterli-liği ve etkinliği açısından ge...

