Biography
John Nash was born in London and educated at Wellington College.
On the advice of his older brother, fellow artist Paul Nash,
he avoided art school as a formal art training would destroy
"the special thing" that John possessed.
He was
a founder member of the London Group and also showed with the
Camden Town Group. He was a very accomplished wood engraver
and lithographer and served as an official war artist in both
the World Wars. On one occasion in 1917, Nash was one of eighty
men ordered to cross No-Mans-Land at Marcoing near Cambrai.
Of these, only Nash and eleven men returned. Afterwards Nash
painted Over the Top in memory of the failed attack.
From
1924 to 1929 he taught at Ruskin School of Art in Oxford, and
from 1934 to 1940 taught at the Design school at the Royal College
of Art. In 1951 he was elected to the Royal Academy.