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The
British artist Louis Wain was a highly successful illustrator whose
reputation was made on his singular and gently humorous pictures of
cats. A cat-lover himself and sometime President of The National Cat
Club, Wain claimed in an interview in 1896 that his "fanciful
cat creations" were first suggested to him by Peter, his black
& white cat. Demand for Wain's work diminished in the decade after
the outbreak of the First World War, leaving him progressively impoverished.
He began to show signs of mental disorder, including becoming aggressive,
abusive and sometimes violent. In 1924 he was certified insane and
placed in the paupers' ward of Springfield Hospital at Tooting. Despite
his delusional state, Wain continued to draw and paint, which led
a year later to him being recognised by one of the hospital guardians
and transferred to a private roomat the Royal Bethlem Hospital in
Southwark, with money raised through public appeal. In Bethlem he
was allowed to draw as much as he liked, and it was here that he produced
the first of his facinating series of "kaleidoscope" cats.
These ranged from relatively straightforward renderings of the cat
itself, though painted in intense, non-naturalistic colour and surrounded
by intricate geometric patterns which deny any illusion of spatial
depth, to images in which the figure of the cat is exploded in a burst
of geometric fragments, the like of which are not to be found in any
of Wain's work before his illness. In 1930he was moved to Napsbury
in Hertfordshire, where he continued to work sporadically until his
death in 1939. |
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