Artist Clare Leighton: The Reaper (BPL 221), 1933

Artist Clare Leighton (1898-1989): The Reaper (BPL 221), 1933

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Clare Leighton (1898-1989):
The Reaper (BPL 221), 1933
Framed (ref: 5467)

Original woodblock, 8.8 x 6.9 cm

See all works by Clare Leighton woodblock allegory design Garden illustration men work Fifty Works by Fifty British Women Artists 1900 - 1950 Slade Garden Museum



Provenance: Private Collection

The Reaper (BPL 221) appears as the title page of one of Clare Leighton’s most celebrated books, The Farmer’s Year: A Calendar of English Husbandry (1933). From ‘Lambing’ in January to ‘The Fat Stock Market’ in December, Leighton’s text and full page engravings provide a remarkable account of English farming before the advent of agribusiness.

Clare would typically take several days to produce a wood engraving, painstakingly carving the image with special tools strong enough to incise into the end grain of the block, which was typically made of boxwood, sufficiently hard to allow for a number of prints to be made before any loss of sharpness.

This engraving shows the labourer setting out to reap the harvest of a whole year’s varied travail, to cut and gather by hand what today requires the use of fuel wrung from the bowels of the earth. His right hand holds the tip of the blade to keep it from damage and from harming any passer-by. His left keeps the scythe neatly balanced on his shoulder; from his waist hangs a sharpening stone which he will need to use again and again as the work proceeds.

In addition to the artist’s personal acquaintance with the scythe (always loath to portray what she had not herself experienced, she learnt to ‘....stroke the grasses to their death’) we can be sure that its constructional details are accurate. This illustrates one of Clare Leighton’s dearest principles; any criticism from a farm worker would have shamed her profoundly.

Commentary by David Leighton, Clare Leighton’s nephew and artistic executor. He is author of Clare Leighton: The Growth and Shaping of an Artist-Writer (2009).

We are grateful to David Leighton, the artist’s nephew and artistic executor for assistance.