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  1. Extracts from Winifred's writings continued. Unknown Colour. Colour has been used chiefly in the past as a means to display form – form being thought of as its obvious master. The freedom of abstract thought has come, and shows us a future lying ahead of colour as one of the three great abstract arts. Mathematics – music – colour.

  2. See many of Winifred Nicholson’s finest paintings, showing her distinctive use of colour and light in still life, landscape and composition. Often, she painted windowscapes – the near and far.

  3. Winifred writes an article entitled ‘Unknown Colour’, (under the name Winifred Dacre), in Circle, International Survey of Constructive Art, edited by J.L. Martin, Ben Nicholson, and Naum Gabo. July: exhibits four abstract pictures at the London Gallery in an Exhibition of Constructivist Art (under the name Winifred Dacre).

  4. 19 de mai. de 2024 · Winifred visited the Hebrides and Western Scotland many times during the 1940s and ‘50s and in 1953 she exhibited works from these trips at the Scottish Gallery, Edinburgh. Many of them were landscapes or flower paintings, for which she was well known. During her lifetime she showed in over 200 group exhibitions and in 1979 a major touring ...

  5. See many of Winifred Nicholson’s finest paintings, showing her distinctive use of colour and light in still life, landscape and composition. Often, she painted windowscapes – the near and far.

  6. See many of Winifred Nicholson’s finest paintings, showing her distinctive use of colour and light in still life, landscape and composition. Often, she painted windowscapes – the near and far.

  7. Winifred Nicholson British, 1893-1981. Winifred Nicholson was born in Oxford in 1983 as Rosa Winifred Roberts. From early on in her childhood she was encouraged to paint by her grandfather, the artist and friend of the pre-Raphaelites, George Howard, Earl of Carlisle. In 1912 she began her formal studies at the Byam Shaw school of Art, London.