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marlow moss

Arts, Painting and Sculpture

1889 – 1958

Suggested by Julie Travis

Marjorie Jewel “Marlow Moss” was the first British Constructivist artist; she worked in painting and sculpture. She was extremely unconventional person, living as a masculine lesbian who created groundbreaking art in Lamorna, nr Penzance from the age of around 30, until her death in 1958.

From wikipedia:
Born in Kilburn, London, Moss studied at St John's Wood Art School, the Slade School of Fine Art, and the Académie Moderne, Paris. Around 1919 she changed her forename from Marjorie to Marlow and adopted a masculine appearance. This was precipitated by a ‘shock of an emotional nature’ and the abandonment of her studies at the Slade, to live alone in Cornwall.

Moss was a pupil of Fernand Léger and Amédée Ozenfant in Paris and was associated with Piet Mondrian - they mutually influenced each other's use of the double line. She was a founding member of the Abstraction-Création association and the only British artist to feature in all five annuals published by the group.

At the beginning of World War II Moss left France to live near Lamorna Cove in Cornwall, studying architecture at the Penzance School of Art. For the rest of her life she lived and worked in Cornwall, frequently visiting Paris. A neighbour, in Lamorna, described her as ″a dear little soul″ who used to give all the children of the village a Christmas present. The neighbour, when a child, used to peer into her studio to watch her paint,

“... we'd see her pacing up and down, pacing, pacing. And then she would draw a straight line. Her work was all straight lines and cubes. Then she'd pace up and down again and then – uh, a square would be drawn.”

Individual exhibitions of her work were staged by Erica Brausen in the Hanover Gallery in London in 1953 and 1958. Other exhibitions took place in the Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam, in 1962 and in the Town Hall of Middleburg in Spring 1972.