<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<ead xmlns="urn:isbn:1-931666-22-9" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="urn:isbn:1-931666-22-9 ead.xsd" relatedencoding="marc21">
  <eadheader audience="internal" langencoding="ISO639-2b">
    <eadid mainagencycode="US-txauhrh" countrycode="US">urn:taro:utexas.hrc.00206</eadid>
    <filedesc>
      <titlestmt>
        <titleproper>Augustus John: </titleproper>
        <subtitle>An Inventory of His Collection at the Harry Ransom
					Center</subtitle>
        <author encodinganalog="245$c">Finding aid created by Ransom Center Staff</author>
      </titlestmt>
      <publicationstmt>
        <publisher encodinganalog="260$b">Harry Ransom Center, </publisher>
        <date encodinganalog="260$c" calendar="gregorian" era="ce">2003</date>
      </publicationstmt>
    </filedesc>
    <profiledesc>
      <creation>Text converted by SPI Content Sciences Inc., <date>July
				2003</date>.</creation>
      <langusage>Finding aid written in <language langcode="eng" scriptcode="Latn">English.</language></langusage>
    </profiledesc>
    <revisiondesc>
      <change>
        <date>10 February 2010</date>
        <item>Revised by Joan Sibley to incorporate DACS and other stylistic changes for Art
					Collection finding aids.</item>
      </change>
    </revisiondesc>
  </eadheader>
  <archdesc level="collection" type="inventory" audience="external">
    <did>
      <head>Collection Summary</head>
      <origination label="Creator:"><persname source="lcnaf" encodinganalog="100">John, Augustus, </persname>1878-1961</origination>
      <unittitle label="Title:" encodinganalog="245">Augustus John Art Collection</unittitle>
      <unitdate type="inclusive" encodinganalog="245$f" era="ce" calendar="gregorian" label="Dates:" normal="1903/1946">
        1903-1946
      </unitdate>
      <unitid label="Call Number: " countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-txauhrh" encodinganalog="099">
        Art Collection AR-00131
      </unitid>
      <physdesc label="Extent:" encodinganalog="300$a">
        <extent>1 box (10 items)  </extent>
      </physdesc>
      <repository label="Repository:" encodinganalog="852$a">
        <extref xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" xlink:show="new" xlink:actuate="onRequest" xlink:href="http://www.hrc.utexas.edu/">
          <corpname><subarea>Harry Ransom Center, </subarea>The University of Texas at Austin </corpname>
        </extref>
      </repository>
      <abstract encodinganalog="520$a">The Collection consists of ten portraits on paper
				(drawings, etchings, and reproductive prints) of well-known English contemporaries
				of John, including James Joyce, Ottoline Morrell, and W. B. Yeats.</abstract>
      <langmaterial label="Language: " encodinganalog="546$a">
        <language langcode="eng" scriptcode="Latn">No linguistic material present</language>
      </langmaterial>
    </did>
    <acqinfo encodinganalog="541">
      <head>Acquisition:</head>
      <p>Purchases (R938, R1252, R3785, R4731, R5180) and gift (R2767)</p>
    </acqinfo>
    <accessrestrict encodinganalog="506">
      <head>Access:</head>
      <p>Open for research. A minimum of twenty-four hours is required to pull art materials to
				the Reading Room.</p>
    </accessrestrict>
    <processinfo encodinganalog="583">
      <head>Processed by:</head>
      <p>Helen Young, 1997</p>
    </processinfo>
    <bioghist encodinganalog="545">
      <head>Biographical Sketch</head>
      <p>Augustus Edwin John was born January 4, 1878, at Tenby, Pembrokeshire, to Edwin
				William John and Augusta Smith. In 1894 he began four years of studies at the Slade
				School of Fine Art in London, where he worked under Henry Tonks and Frederick Brown.
				During his time at the Slade School, John also studied the works of the Old Masters
				at the National Gallery. After suffering a head injury while swimming at
				Pembrokeshire in 1897, the quality of John's artwork, as well as his appearance and
				personality, changed. His methodical style became freer and bolder, and his work
				started to gain notice. In 1898, John won the Slade Prize for his <title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic" xlink:href="">Moses and the Brazen Serpent</title>.</p>
      <p>John left the Slade School in 1898, and he held his first one-man exhibition in 1899
				at the Carfax Gallery in London. Later that same year he traveled on the continent,
				part of the time with a group consisting of the artist brothers Sir William
				Rothenstein and Albert Rutherston, William Orpen, Sir Charles Conder, and Ida
				Nettleship (a fellow Slade student). In France, he was influenced by the work of
				Pierre Puvis de Chavannes and Pablo Picasso.</p>
      <p>In 1901, John married Ida Nettleship, and he took a position as an art instructor at
				the University of Liverpool. Here he produced many etchings, and also befriended the
				University Librarian, John Sampson, an authority on gypsies. John became interested
				in gypsy culture; he later traveled with gypsies and learned their language and
				customs.</p>
      <p>In 1902, John moved to a studio space in London, where he started to paint more
				portraits in order to support his growing family. That same year, he also began a
				relationship with Dorothy McNeill (to whom he gave the gypsy name Dorelia), a friend
				of his sister, Gwen John. After Ida's death in childbirth in 1907, Dorelia became
				the artist's wife in all but name. Also in 1907, he met James Dickson Innes, another
				Welsh painter with whom he traveled in Wales. It was this friendship that inspired
				John to paint landscapes in a more modern and impressionistic style. While John's
				oil paintings still showed the influence of Rubens and other Old Masters, his
				strongest works during this time were his drawings.</p>
      <p>After World War I, John became best known for his portraits of literary and society
				figures, in part because there was a great demand for his portraits, but also
				because he needed the income. As a result, John had little time to work on the
				large-scale imaginative paintings in which he was more interested.</p>
      <p>In his later life, Augustus John wrote two autobiographical books, <title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic" xlink:href="">Chiaroscuro: Fragments of Autobiography</title> (1952) and
					<title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic" xlink:href="">Finishing Touches</title> (1964, published posthumously).
				He died October 31, 1961, in Fordingbridge, Hampshire.</p>
    </bioghist>
    <bibliography>
      <head>Sources:</head>
      <p>Easton, Malcolm, and Holroyd, Michael. <title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic" xlink:href="">The Art of Augustus
					John</title>. Boston: D. R. Godine, 1975.</p>
      <p><title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic" xlink:href="">The Dictionary of National Biography, 1961-1970 (8th
					Supplement)</title>. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1981.</p>
    </bibliography>
    <scopecontent id="a3" encodinganalog="520$b">
      <head>Scope and Contents</head>
      <p>The Augustus John Art Collection consists of ten portraits on paper (5 drawings, 3
				etchings, and 2 reproductive prints) of well-known English contemporaries of John,
				including James Joyce, Ottoline Morrell, and W. B. Yeats. These works are arranged
				alphabetically by subject.</p>
    </scopecontent>
    <relatedmaterial encodinganalog="544">
      <p>The Art Collection also has an additional sketch by John, a portrait of Nancy Cunard
				drawn on a piece of table cloth, which is part of the Nancy Cunard Art Collection.
				The Manuscripts Collection holds papers of Augustus John, including letters to Dora
				Carrington, Edward Gordon Craig, and Ottoline Morrell.</p>
    </relatedmaterial>
    <dsc type="in-depth">
      <head>Augustus John Art Collection--Item List</head>
      <c01 level="series">
        <did>
          <unittitle/>
        </did>
        <c02>
          <did>
            <container type="Box">1.1</container>
            <unittitle>Aleister Crowley.</unittitle>
            <unitdate>1946.</unitdate>
            <physdesc>1 drawing (charcoal), <dimensions>50.5 × 37.9
								cm.</dimensions></physdesc>
            <unitid label="Accession Number">
              <emph render="bold">65.140</emph>
            </unitid>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02>
          <did>
            <container type="Box">1.2</container>
            <unittitle>[Ronald Firbank].</unittitle>
            <unitdate>1914.</unitdate>
            <physdesc>1 drawing (pencil), <dimensions>42.8 × 32.7
								cm.</dimensions></physdesc>
            <unitid label="Accession Number">
              <emph render="bold">65.141</emph>
            </unitid>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02>
          <did>
            <container type="Box">1.3</container>
            <unittitle>Thomas Hardy, O.M.</unittitle>
            <unitdate>1924.</unitdate>
            <physdesc>1 reproductive print, <dimensions>45.4 × 37.9
								cm.</dimensions></physdesc>
            <unitid label="Accession Number">
              <emph render="bold">79.53</emph>
            </unitid>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02>
          <did>
            <container type="Box">1.4</container>
            <unittitle>[James Joyce].</unittitle>
            <unitdate>Circa 1930.</unitdate>
            <physdesc>1 drawing (pencil), <dimensions>46.2 × 31.5
								cm.</dimensions></physdesc>
            <unitid label="Accession Number">
              <emph render="bold">65.338</emph>
            </unitid>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02>
          <did>
            <container type="Box">1.5</container>
            <unittitle>[James Joyce].</unittitle>
            <unitdate>Circa 1930.</unitdate>
            <physdesc>1 drawing (pencil), <dimensions>46.2 × 31.6
								cm.</dimensions></physdesc>
            <unitid label="Accession Number">
              <emph render="bold">70.64</emph>
            </unitid>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02>
          <did>
            <container type="Box">1.6</container>
            <unittitle>[T. E. Lawrence].</unittitle>
            <unitdate>Circa 1919.</unitdate>
            <physdesc>1 print (collotype), <dimensions>25.6 × 19.4
								cm.</dimensions></physdesc>
            <unitid label="Accession Number">
              <emph render="bold">72.80</emph>
            </unitid>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02>
          <did>
            <container type="Box">1.7</container>
            <unittitle>Percy Wyndham Lewis.</unittitle>
            <unitdate>Circa 1903.</unitdate>
            <physdesc>1 print (etching), <dimensions>17.8 × 13.8
								cm.</dimensions></physdesc>
            <unitid label="Accession Number">
              <emph render="bold">73.509</emph>
            </unitid>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02>
          <did>
            <container type="Box">1.8</container>
            <unittitle>[Ottoline Morrell].</unittitle>
            <unitdate>Circa 1908.</unitdate>
            <physdesc>1 drawing (pencil), <dimensions>45.8 × 30.5
								cm.</dimensions></physdesc>
            <unitid label="Accession Number">
              <emph render="bold">67.25</emph>
            </unitid>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02>
          <did>
            <container type="Box">1.9</container>
            <unittitle>W. B. Yeats.</unittitle>
            <unitdate>Circa 1907.</unitdate>
            <physdesc>1 print (etching), <dimensions>17.7 × 12.7
								cm.</dimensions></physdesc>
            <unitid label="Accession Number">
              <emph render="bold">69.28</emph>
            </unitid>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02>
          <did>
            <container type="Box">1.10</container>
            <unittitle>W. B. Yeats.</unittitle>
            <unitdate>Circa 1907.</unitdate>
            <physdesc>1 print (etching), <dimensions>17.8 × 12.6
								cm.</dimensions></physdesc>
            <unitid label="Accession Number">
              <emph render="bold">75.157.4</emph>
            </unitid>
          </did>
        </c02>
      </c01>
    </dsc>
  </archdesc>
</ead>





