Pendle Hill Landscape

Pendle Hill Landscape

This view, identified by the seller as Pendle Hill on the background horizon, may show the peak looking from the River Ribble in foreground. A series of home are at center of frame, and a figure resembling a man (left center near lower margin) looks towards Pendle Hill.

Pendle Hill is in the east of Lancashire, England, near the towns of BurnleyNelsonColneBrierfieldClitheroe and Padiham. Its summit is 557 metres (1,827 ft) above mean sea level. It gives its name to the Borough of Pendle. It is an isolated hill in the Pennines, separated from the South Pennines to the east, the Bowland Fells to the northwest, and the West Pennine Moors to the south. It is included in a detached part of the Forest of Bowland Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty.  Wikipedia- (October, 2024)

English photographer John Bell (1920-64) is believed to have done this print late in his career, before his life was cut tragically short. The following is his obituary which appeared in The Photographic Journal of the Royal Photographic Association: Vol. 104, No. 10 (October, 1964) p. 280:

JOHN BELL (Fellow)

The death of John Bell (Fellow) at the age of 44 occurred in a Coventry hospital on 27 July following a tragic road accident on 14 July at Allesley, between Birmingham and Coventry. Mr. Bell was travelling from his native Accrington to London, where he had been working since early in the year, and had stopped to give assistance at the scene of an accident in which a motor van containing four young people had overturned. In disregard of possible danger he had just rescued one of them who was unconscious, when another vehicle collided with the wreckage and Mr. Bell received severe injuries. He never regained consciousness.

John Bell’s interest in pictorial photography started in his early twenties and he quickly made a mark in Lancashire club circles. He joined the Society in 1945, attaining Associate-ship in the same year and Fellowship in 1956.

Three years later, at the London Salon Jubilee Exhibition, he was one of the few to be awarded a commemorative medal. Mr. Bell’s prints had been shown in the leading exhibitions for a period of almost 20 years. His work was characterized by a bold, original and versatile approach, much of it in the gum bichromate process, and more recently he had exhibited prints in trichrome gum bichromate.

His latest achievement was the formation of the North West Programme Committee of the Pictorial Group in 1963, for it was his vision, hard work and persistence that made it possible and brought it to fruition. His lack of personal ambition and his dedication to the cause of the advancement of photography were never more in evidence than in the effort he devoted to this project. To his aunt and cousins, and his friends in whom he inspired so much affection, we offer our deepest sympathy.   J. Y. Brown

Title
Pendle Hill Landscape
Photographer
Country
Medium
Year
Dimensions

Image Dimensions16.3 x 21.8 cm

Support Dimensionsunmounted

Print Notes

Printed on paper stock watermarked K E N T; unsigned, but known to have come from larger body of his work, some examples with his address.

Provenance

Purchased from dealer in Lancashire, United Kingdom in August, 2016 who stated it had been purchased from job lot in Scotland, some with Bell’s address on print verso: Blackburn Rd Accrington.