Portrait of Sam Nagley , 1922
75 x 65 cm (h x w)
Oil on canvas

© The William Roberts Society, London

In Kramer’s bold, modern Portrait of Sam Nagley the artist uses a typically plain black background against which to highlight his sitter’s head giving the work a condensed, graphic quality. The angular modelling of Nagley’s face shows the influence of the Vorticist movement with which Kramer was associated in 1915. Sam Nagley was a doctor and musician in Kramer’s home town of Leeds, where the artist returned after his father’s death in 1916. Nagley’s sister, who married another of the artist’s circle, Dr. Caplan, was also a friend and model of Kramer’s.

Exhibited by:

Ben Uri Research Unit

More from Ben Uri Research Unit

Family Group , 1940
76 x 56 cm (h x w)
Gouache on Paper
Ben Uri Research Unit
Bathers in a Landscape , 1930s-40s
51 x 65 cm (h x w)
Lithograph on paper
Ben Uri Research Unit
Ronda, Spain , 1954-56
45.5 x 61 cm (h x w)
Charcoal on paper
Ben Uri Research Unit
Mount Zion and the Church of the Dormition, Jerusalem , 1923
60 x 49 cm (h x w)
Oil on canvas
Ben Uri Research Unit
Armenian Church, Jerusalem , 1923
48.5 x 63 cm (h x w)
Charcoal and Mixed Chalks
Ben Uri Research Unit