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Beachy Head, Stars

© the artist's estate. Image credit: British Council Collection

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The bright white cliffs of England’s south coast have long served the national imagination. However their pristine appearance, as opposed to the grubbier cliffs of Dieppe across the Channel, is due to erosion, something that Jeffery Camp has observed with minute detail over many years. In the 1970s, Camp was living with his wife in Hastings, just a short drive away from the famous headland, Beachy Head. Its great height grants unparalleled views, but also makes it one of the most notorious suicide spots in the world. It is one of Camp’s prevailing subjects, since, ‘until a policeman told me how humans jumped’, Camp recalls, ‘I had concentrated on the splendour of vast spaces.’ Camp was born on the outskirts of Lowestoft, a fishing town on the cold North Sea, not a sensual place.

British Council Collection

London

Title

Beachy Head, Stars

Date

1973

Medium

oil on canvas

Measurements

H 126 x W 126 cm

Accession number

P6436

Acquisition method

purchased from Browse and Darby, 1995

Work type

Painting

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British Council Collection

British Council, 1 Redman Place, London, Greater London E20 1JQ England

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