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Nancy Nicholson

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Known for
  
fabric design

Siblings
  
Ben Nicholson

Died
  
1977

Role
  
Designer

Name
  
Nancy Nicholson


Nancy Nicholson A Group Gathering Collar Piece Nancy Nicholson


Full Name
  
Annie Mary Pryde Nicholson

Spouse
  
Robert Graves (m. 1918–1949)

Children
  
Sam Graves, Jennie Graves, David Graves, Catherine Graves

Parents
  
William Nicholson, Mabel Pryde

Similar People
  
William Nicholson, Ben Nicholson, Robert Graves, James Pryde, Lucia Graves

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Nancy Nicholson (1899–1977) was a British painter and fabric designer.

Contents

Nancy Nicholson NANCY NICHOLSON July 2013

Big Embroidery by Nancy Nicholson


Early life

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Born Annie Mary Pryde Nicholson, she was the only daughter of the artists Sir William Nicholson and Mabel Pryde. She had three brothers, artist Ben Nicholson, architect Christopher Nicholson and Anthony, who was killed in action in 1918 in the First World War.

Robert Graves

Nancy Nicholson NANCY NICHOLSON

Nancy married the poet Robert Graves in 1918. The following year Graves started as a student in Oxford. The couple lived in a cottage on Boars Hill in Oxford which they rented from the author John Masefield. In 1920, in partnership with a neighbour, The Hon. Mrs Michael Howard, Nancy set up a small grocer's shop, next door to the Masefields' house. Alarmed by the tourists it attracted, Mrs Masefield opposed its takeover by an Oxford firm, and the project collapsed after six months, leaving heavy debts settled only with the help of friends and family. In disgust, Graves and Nancy moved to the village of Islip, the other side of Oxford.

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A lifelong feminist, Nancy used to cycle to Oxfordshire villages and set up a stall to explain to women how to use contraception, when it was still illegal. Her open-mindedness led her to accept a triangular relationship, and from early 1926 Laura Riding lived with her and Graves in London The marriage eventually broke down, as Graves increasingly favoured Riding, leaving Nancy to bring up the four children of the marriage alone, in a succession of locations, including Cumberland and a further spell on Boars Hill. Nancy and Graves legally divorced in 1949.

Publishing and textile design

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After a period in the early 1930s living with Geoffrey Taylor on a houseboat moored in Hammersmith, Nancy set up the Poulk Press, in which she collaborated for a time with him. They lived near Sutton Veny, Wiltshire, in a timber house designed by Nancy and built with family labour. Her relationship with Taylor lasted five years. She worked at this period with her brother Ben and his wife Barbara Hepworth on textiles.

Nancy Nicholson NANCY NICHOLSON

Undeterred by the failure of the Boars Hill shop, in the 1940s she ran a business in Motcomb Street, London. Her designs influenced her sister-in-law EQ Nicholson. Her work was exhibited at the Victoria and Albert Museum in 1976.


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References

Nancy Nicholson Wikipedia