填空题You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 1-13, which are based on
Reading Passage 1 below.
Paul Nash
Paul Nash,
the elder son of William Nash and his first wife, Caroline Jackson, was born in
London on 11th May, 1889. His father was a successful lawyer who became the
recorder of Abingdon. According to Ronald Blythe: 'In 1901 the family returned
to its native Buckinghamshire, where the garden of Wood Lane House at Iver
Heath, and the countryside of the Chiltern Hills, with its sculptural beeches
and chalky contours, were early influences on the development of the three
children. Their lives were overshadowed by their mother's mental illness and
Nash himself was greatly helped by his nurse who, with some elderly neighbours,
introduced him to the universe of plants.' Nash was educated at
St. Paul's School and the Slade School of Art, where he met Stanley Spencer,
Mark Gertler, C. R. W. Nevinson, Edward Wadsworth, Dora Carrington, William
Roberts and Claughton Pellew. Unlike some of his contemporaries at the Slade
School, Nash remained untouched by the two post-impressionist exhibitions
organised by Roger Fry in 1910 and 1912. Instead, he was influenced by the work
of William Blake. He also became a close friend of Gordon Bottomley, who took a
keen interest in his career. Nash had his first one-man show,
of ink and wash drawings, at the Carfax Gallery in 1912. The following year he
shared an exhibition at the Dorien Leigh Gallery with his brother, John Nash.
The art critic, Ronald Blythe, has argued: 'Due to the enthusiasm of Michael
Sadler and William Rothenstein, the exhibition, though modestly hung on the
walls of a lampshade shop and announced by a home-made poster, was a success.'
Myfanwy Piper, has added: 'Nash had a noteworthy sense of order and of the
niceties of presentation; his pictures were beautifully framed, drawings
mounted, his studio precisely and decoratively tidy, and oddments which he
collected were worked up into compositions.' On the outbreak of
the First World War Nash considered the possibility of joining the British Army.
He told a friend: 'I am not keen to rush off and be a soldier. The whole
damnable war is too horrible of course and I am all against killing anybody,
speaking off hand, but beside all that I believe both Jack and I might be more
useful as ambulance and red cross men and to that end we are training. There may
be emergencies later and I mean to get some drilling locally and learn to fire a
gun but I don't see the necessity for a gentle-minded creature like myself to be
rushed into some stuffy brutal barracks to spend the next few months practically
doing nothing but swagger about disguised as a soldier in case the Germans poor
misguided fellows—should land.' Nash enlisted in the Artists'
Rifles. He told Gordon Bottomley: 'I have joined the Artists' London Regiment of
Territorials the old Corps which started with Rossetti, Leighton and Millais as
members in 1860. Every man must do his bit in this horrible business so I have
given up painting. There are many nice creatures in my company and I enjoy the
burst of exercise—marching, drilling all day in the open air about the pleasant
parts of Regents Park and Hampstead Heath.' In March 1917 he
was sent to the Western Front. Nash, who took part in the offensive at Ypres,
had reached the rank of lieutenant in the Hampshire Regiment by 1916. Whenever
possible, Nash made sketches of life in the trenches. In May, 1917 he was
invalided home after a non-military accident. While recuperating in London, Nash
worked from his sketches to produce a series of war paintings. This work was
well received when exhibited later that year. As a result of
this exhibition, Charles Masterman, head of the government's War Propaganda
Bureau (WPB), and the advice of Edward Marsh and William Rothenstein, it was
decided to recruit Nash as a war artist. In November 1917 in the immediate
aftermath of the battle of Passchendaele Nash returned to France. Nash's work
during the war included The Menin Road, The Ypres Salientat Night, The Mule
Track, A Howitzer Firing, Ruined Country and Spring in the Trenches.
Nash was unhappy with his work as a member of War Propaganda Bureau. He
wrote at the time: 'I am no longer an artist. I am a messenger who will bring
back word from the men who are fighting to those who want the war to go on for
ever. Feeble, inarticulate will be my message, but it will have a bitter truth
and may it burn their lousy souls.' However, as Myfanwy Piper has pointed out:
'The drawings he made then, of shorn trees in ruined and flooded landscapes,
were the works that made Nash's reputation. They were shown at the Leicester
Galleries in 1918 together with his first efforts at oil painting, in which he
was self-taught and quickly successful, though his drawings made in the field
had more immediate public impact. From April of that year until early in 1919
Nash was engaged on paintings commissioned by the Department of Information for
the newly established Imperial War Museum... His poetic imagination, instead of
being crushed by the terrible circumstances of war, had expanded to produce
terrible images—terrible because of their combination of detached, almost
abstract, appreciation and their truth to appearance.' In 1919
Nash moved to Dymchurch in Kent, beginning his well-known series of pictures of
the sea, the breakwaters, and the long wall that prevents the sea from flooding
Romney Marsh. This included Winter Sea and Dymchurch Steps. Nash also painted
the landscapes of the Chiltern Hills. In 1924 and 1928 he had successful
exhibitions at the Leicester Galleries. Despite this popular acclaim in 1929 his
work became more abstract. In 1933 Nash founded Unit One, the group of
experimental painters, sculptors, and architects which included Herbert Read,
Edward Wadsworth, Henry Moore, Barbara Hepworth, Edward Burra, Ben Nicholson and
Wells Coates. Nash also contributed to the Architectural Review and Country Life
and wrote Shell Guide to Dorset (1936). During the Second World
War Nash was employed by the Ministry of Information and the Air Ministry and
paintings produced by him during this period include the Battle of Britain and
Totes Meer. His biographer, Myfanwy Piper, has argued: 'This war disturbed Nash
but did not change his art as the last one had. His style and his habits were
formed, and in the new war he treated his new subjects as he had treated those
he had been thinking about for so long. His late paintings, both oils and
watercolours, are alternately brilliant and sombre in colour with the light of
setting suns and rising moons spreading over wooded and hilly
landscapes.' Paul Nash died at 35 Boscombe Spa Road,
Bournemouth, on 11th July 1946.
—www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk
填空题
Complete the table below. Choose NO MORE THAN
THREE WORDS from Reading Passage 1 for each answer.
Write your answers in boxes on your answer sheet.
Time
Experience
1912-1913
When Paul Nash studied at the Slade School of Art, he has his
{{U}}{{U}} 1 {{/U}}{{/U}}, which showed his ink and wash drawings. And
one year later, he shared another exhibition with {{U}}{{U}} 2
{{/U}}{{/U}}, John Nash.
1914-1917
At the beginning of the First World War, Nash considered to join
the Army. Later, he really gave up painting and became a member of
{{U}}{{U}} 3 {{/U}}{{/U}}In 1917, he was also sent to {{U}}{{U}}
4 {{/U}}{{/U}}, but unfortunately two months later, he was released from
the military service after a {{U}}{{U}} 5 {{/U}}{{/U}}.
Later 1917- 1919
Nash was drafted as a {{U}}{{U}} 6 {{/U}}{{/U}}in WPB.
Although he was not satisfied with the work, he had to admit the {{U}}{{U}}
7 {{/U}}{{/U}}he got from those works originated from work. He made his
first efforts at {{U}}{{U}} 8 {{/U}}{{/U}}shown in 1918 and
his {{U}}{{U}} 9 {{/U}}{{/U}}expanded to produce terrible
image.
1924-1933
From 1924 to 1929, Nash had two successful exhibitions. His work
became more abstract. In1933, he established {{U}}{{U}} 10
{{/U}}{{/U}}.
填空题
Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading Passage 1?
In boxes on your answer sheet, write
TRUE if the statement agrees with the information
FALSE if the statement contradicts the information
NOT GIVEN if there is no information on this
Nash was impressed by the work of William Blake instead of Roger Fry when he studied at the Slade School of Art.
填空题
World War Two produced the same consequence to Nash's painting as World War One.
填空题
His paintings during World War Two are all about nature, like the setting suns and rising moons.