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This is an open edition print on 310gsm thick, 100% cotton rag paper of s 1933 photograph by Paul Nash. Initially, using a No.1A pocket Kodak series 2 camera, Nash captured images so that he could refer to them in the creation of his paintings. Increasingly, however, he saw his photographs, not as aids or sketches, but as artworks in their own right. nbspHere Nash depicts one of the Avebury Sentinels. Nash was always interested in landscapes and aspects of the natural world, not for their historical or aesthetic interest per se, but more because he thought that certain ‘places’ as he called them had about them a mystical importance, a ‘genius loci’ which lent the place an importance which transcended its apparent properties. As he wrote ’there are places…whose relationship of parts creates a mystery, an enchantment’. It is this mystery, this enchantment, which Nash tries to capture in his photographs.
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