Page 9 - Richard Kenton Webb: Vol.5
P. 9
Richard Kenton Webb
in conversation with Richard Davey
In 1858, Henry Gray, a young surgeon and anatomist published his
Anatomy, a 750 page medical textbook with 363 illustrations by his friend
and colleague, Henry Vandyke Carter. Since its publication it has become
the authoritative textbook for medical students and anyone wanting
to understand the inner workings of the human body. But, when Richard
Kenton Webb studied Carter’s detailed drawings, his Romantic imagina -
tion saw more than arteries, veins, sinews, and bones, he saw landscapes.
He bought a second copy of the book and used its pages as a surface
to paint on, covering exposed anatomy with a new skin of paint that
turned muscles into mountains and the bones exposed by Carter’s
pen into geological features.
I was confronted by a wall of these small paintings during my first visit
to his studio almost 30 years ago, when it was on the top floor of a con -
vert ed mill in Stroud. I found myself mesmerised, drawn into a vision
that wove the human body and the landscape into a spiritual palimpsest.
And as Richard and I stood talking, I encountered the same poetic vision