Janet Nathan


Janet Nathan was a British artist known for her constructed and painted relief works made from wood, resin, board and found materials. Emerging in the late 1970s, she developed a distinctive sculptural language combining abstraction, material memory and maritime references. Nathan exhibited widely across the United Kingdom, including at the Institute of Contemporary Arts, Ikon Gallery, the Whitechapel Open and The British Art Show. Her work appeared intermittently in the Royal Academy Summer Exhibition from 1980.
Her work is represented in major public collections, including Tate, the Arts Council Collection and the British Council. She was a long-standing member of The London Group.

Early life and education

Nathan was born in London in 1938. She studied sculpture at St Martin's School of Art, where she developed an early interest in modular composition, colour and relief construction. She studied under the painter Frederick Gore RA CBE.

Early career

According to The Barnet Press, Nathan’s first solo exhibition at the Nicholas Treadwell Gallery in 1973 sold well, with the newspaper reporting that Princess Margaret and Lord Snowdon purchased four works.
A contemporaneous exhibition booklet from the Nicholas Treadwell Gallery documented her growing recognition among London collectors.

Themes and materials

Critics emphasise Nathan’s constructed relief forms made from wood, board, resin and found materials. Maritime and shoreline motifs recur throughout her practice, referencing docks, jetties, mudflats and coastal structures.
Beaumont identified the “cruciform” as a key formal device in her early works, culminating in the relief Zeloso. Mel Gooding described her method as one of “lyric geometry.” Bryan Robertson compared her constructions to those of Louise Nevelson.

Career

Early exhibitions

Nathan held her first institutional solo exhibition at Newcastle Polytechnic Art Gallery in 1979.
Other early exhibitions include:
She also exhibited in Art and the Sea and The Discerning Eye.
In 1990 she was commissioned to create work for the relaunch of The Ivy restaurant, listed in The Ivy: The Restaurant and Its Recipes alongside Sir Eduardo Paolozzi and Peter Blake.
In 1997 the Barbican Centre presented a major retrospective, Janet Nathan: Constructions 1979–1997, which toured to Folkestone, Sheffield and Brighton.

Work in the Tate

Two major reliefs by Nathan are held in the permanent collection of Tate Britain:
  • Zeloso, mixed media relief.
  • Near Paros, mixed media relief.

The London Group

Nathan exhibited extensively with The London Group from the early 1980s through the 2010s. She became a member in 1984, and her final solo exhibition at the Cello Factory took place in 2019. Her work was shown at Morley Gallery, the Royal College of Art, Chelsea Arts Club and the Barbican Centre.

Critical reception

Leading critics including Bryan Robertson, Mel Gooding, Mary-Rose Beaumont and Andrew Lambirth wrote on Nathan’s work.

Personal life

From the mid-1980s Nathan lived with painter Patrick Caulfield CBE RA on Belsize Square, London. Caulfield’s final painting, Braque Curtain, was created as a tribute to her. She married Caulfield in 1999. They are buried together at Highgate Cemetery. Nathan had three sons from a previous marriage.
Nathan's friendship with painter John Hoyland is documented in Lambirth’s monograph of Hoyland, noting a 1988 sailing trip with Nathan, Caulfield and Beverley Heath.

Legacy

Posthumous exhibitions include:
  • *Tate Britain: Ideas into Action, https://www.tate.org.uk/visit/tate-britain/display/modern-and-contemporary-british-art/19651980
  • The London Group at Bankside, Bankside Gallery
  • Voyages, Willow Beck Gallery, Harrogate
Nathan’s relief Zeloso remains on display in Tate Britain’s “Ideas into Action” gallery.

Work in collections

Nathan’s work is held in the following collections: