John Petts and the Caseg PressThis title was first published in 2000: John Petts (1914-1991) is one of the outstanding wood-engravers of the twentieth century. His stunning prints featuring Welsh mountains and the people who live amongst them reflect his deep concern for the history of the land and are distinguished by his profound understanding of the physical and psychological properties of light. Extensively illustrated, John Petts and the Caseg Press spans the entire career of this reclusive artist and offers the first account of the private press he founded in Snowdonia in 1937. In 1935, John Petts and Brenda Chamberlain abandoned their studentships at the Royal Academy Schools, London for a rundown farmhouse in the rugged terrain of Snowdonia. They started the Caseg Press in 1937 in the hope that it might finance their freedom to work. At first dedicated to saleable ephemera such as Christmas cards and bookplates, the press later became involved in the broader Welsh cultural scene, providing illustrations for the Welsh Review, a monthly literary periodical. In 1941, with the writer Alun Lewis, the Caseg press produced a series of broadsheets designed to express continuity and identification with the life of rural Wales in the face of social change precipitated by the second world war. John Petts and the Caseg Press is the first monograph on this artist. It covers both his work for the Caseg Press and for other publishers such as the Golden Cockerel Press. The volume offers a unique insight into an important chapter in the history of private presses in Britain and the development of neo-romanticism in art and literature during the inter-war period. |
Contents
2 | |
Alun Lewis and the Caseg Broadsheets 19412 | |
A paradise lost 19436 | |
The Caseg Press at Llanystumdwy 194751 | |
New directions | |
Notes | |
Bibliography | |
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Common terms and phrases
1½in 2½in 224 Parachute Field 3½in 5½in 7½in Academy Allen & Unwin Alun Lewis Alun's artist Betsan blocks Brenda Chamberlain broadsheet numbers Caseg Broadsheet Caseg Press Caseg prints colour printing colour wood-engraving commission creative Curig Davies Debris Searcher Defence of Woman endpiece engraving February frontispiece Golden Cockerel Press Gomerian Press Green Island Grongar Hill Gweno Gwyn Jones Gwyn Williams Hornsey Huw Scwd Idris Bell illustrations interview with author Island by Gwyn James Bramwell John and Brenda John and Kusha John Petts John's June Kusha Leominster Letter Lewis's linocut living Llanllechid Llanystumdwy Lloyd George London Lynette Roberts March mountain Nant Ffrancon North Wales November Ouston painted Parachute Field Ambulance pen drawing Petts produced Petts's photograph poem Procession of Bards published Rabbit Catcher repr stained glass Susanna translated by Gwyn Ty'r Mynydd undated Welsh Review Women translated wood wood-engraving writers wrote to John