On the back of the work is a dealer gallery label from a "J. Leger and Sons, 13 Old Bond Street, London W1. Est 1892" and written in pencil "Riddiford Ken 6527".
The work was included in an exhibition at that gallery in September 1944, titled Old and Modern Masters. I'd love to know what made Ken purchase such a modern work and what was his relationship to the donor? Did Mrs P.Riddiford love or loath the work and what made her send it to a gallery in New Zealand? Or, given she was from Surrey which is where Lees died in 1931, did she know the artist?
Further detailed research into this work's provenance may well reveal more about the Riddifords but for me their story is as intriguing as the work.
The life of the artist is itself an interesting story.
Derwent Lees was born in Clarence, Tasmania, to English parents and at an early age had a riding accident in which he suffered a head injury and lost a foot.
He was educated at Melbourne University as well as in Paris and in 1905 relocated to London where he studied at the Slade School of Art and he also taught drawing between 1908-1918. Lees travelled extensively through Europe and had close associations with the well-known painters Augustus John and J.D. Innes with whom he spent much time painting.
It was through Augustus John that Lees met his wife Edith Harriet Price, who was a popular artist model in London at the time. She went by the name of Lyndra and was the subject of many of Lees' paintings. It is more than likely that she is indeed our "Lady in Landscape". The work is undated although, in researching the artist and with so many collections now online it's possible to date the work to somewhere between 1910 and 1914.
Given this timeframe it's also interesting to note that the subject's dress would have been very modern with its unstructured tailoring and bold colours.
The model appears to be holding something in her hand and there is a corresponding shadow on the skirt, this could be an orange, camouflaged or given the pencil lines around the edge of her hand it could be an unfinished section of the painting, we could imagine that she's about to launch a shot-put or cricket ball into the landscape.
Although Lees's works are held in many notable gallery collections in the United Kingdom and Australia, he had a rather sad and troubled life, suffering from an incurable mental disease for which he was institutionalised from 1919 and where he remained until his death on March 24, 1931 in West Park Hospital, Surrey, England.