Child Walking with Check Tablecloth

© the artist's estate/courtesy Flowers Gallery, London. Image credit: British Council Collection

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Notes

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In the 1950s Smith was a leading figure in what the critic David Sylvester dubbed – thinking particularly of Smith's paintings – the Kitchen Sink School. The label implied something more than realistic art, pointing to the emphatically unglamorous realities of everyday life. In fact, the work done by this so-called school varied both in style and in preferred subject matter. In Smith's case he used drab colours with strong tonal contrasts, and dramatic silhouettes and alarming foreshortenings for his apparent charmless scenes. There is a tradition of working class realism in North European art from at least the 17th century, some done for moralising purposes, some to amuse wealthy art patrons. In this picture there is no sense of social distance.

British Council Collection

London

Title

Child Walking with Check Tablecloth

Date

1953

Medium

oil on board

Measurements

H 152 x W 122 cm

Accession number

P286

Acquisition method

purchased from Beaux Arts Gallery, 1956

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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