

Alfred Wallis
Cultural Positioning
Selected Institutional Exhibitions
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Alfred Wallis was a British painter who worked in a distinctive naive style, creating works on cardboard and scraps of material rather than conventional canvas. His paintings, primarily seascapes and harbor scenes informed by his experience as a fisherman and boat builder in St Ives, Cornwall, employed bold outlines and flattened perspective with a directness that anticipated modernist simplification. Working largely in isolation until his discovery by Ben Nicholson and Christopher Wood in the late 1920s, Wallis developed an idiosyncratic visual language that treats water, sky, and vessels as interlocking planes of pure color. His work influenced the St Ives school and remains a singular example of untrained, materially inventive painting practice.
Source: Moma Bulk 2026 05 04 · Trust score: 92% · Updated 25d ago















