John Lewis + Tate Graham Sutherland 'Entrance to a Lane' Wood Framed Print & Mount, 64 x 54cm

£125.00

  • 1 year guarantee included

Free standard delivery






Price
£125.00
Standard UK delivery within 3 weeks
Product description

Product code: 77722120

A framed print of 'Entrance to a Lane', 1939, by Graham Sutherland, from the Tate collection. Made in the UK exclusively for John Lewis.

The black frame is made of FSC-certified solid ayous wood, sourced from sustainably managed forests. Framed with a card mount and glass front, it arrives ready to hang on your wall.

Graham Sutherland (1903–1980) was a respected English artist, much inspired by landscape and religion. He worked in glass, fabrics, prints and portraits, having studied engraving and etching at Goldsmiths College in London. The landscape of Pembrokeshire, in Wales, inspired many of his paintings and his portrait work earned him several patrons in Italy. From 1940-45, he worked as an Official War Artist, recording the effects of bombing on Britain.

Have you thought about wall hooks and fittings?

Product specification
Brand
Tate
Care instructions
Clean with a soft dry cloth. Do not use abrasive chemical products
Composition
Wood frame, glass, print, mount card, MDF backboard
Country of Origin
United Kingdom
Dimensions
H64 x W54 x D4cm
Exclusive to John Lewis
Exclusive
Glazing Type
Glass
Made in the UK
YES
Orientation
Portrait
Size
Medium (Up to 70cm x 70cm)
Subject
Abstract, Museum Art
Weight
3.1kg
Brand information

The Tate collection is the national collection of British art from 1500 to the present day and incorporates international modern and contemporary art, which includes nearly 70,000 artworks. Started as the National Gallery of British Art, the gallery opened its doors in Millbank, London to the public in 1897, displaying a small collection of British artworks. In 1889, the Tate was bolstered by industrialist Henry Tate's large collection of British nineteenth-century art, bequeathed to the nation along with funding for the first Tate Gallery, built at Millbank, now known as Tate Britain, which opened in 1897. In 1955, Tate Gallery became wholly independent from the National Gallery and a major extension opened in 1979.

Tate expanded outside of its original London home with the opening of Tate Liverpool in May 1988 and Tate Gallery, St Ives, Cornwall opening in June 1993. Tate Modern opened in 2000, becoming a London landmark in the former Bankside Power Station, on the opposite side of the Thames from St Paul's Cathedral.

Delivery & returns
Standard Delivery
Free
UK delivery by our supplier within 3 weeks. Where delivery needs to be arranged, you will be contacted to arrange a date and time that's convenient for you.
Click & Collect
Not available for this item
Local Collection Network
Not available for this item

Returns

Return small or medium items by post or to John Lewis & Partners and Waitrose & Partners shops.

Large items (delivered by two people, such as appliances and furniture) can be returned using our Home Collection service.

You can also return a Click & Collect order to where you collected it.

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