Biography
Painter of landscapes, portraits, still-life, animals, imaginative
subjects and inscriptions in watercolours; draughtsman, engraver,
writer and poet.
He studied
at Camberwell School of Art 1909-1914, under Hartrick who influenced
his use of pencil, watercolour and bodycolour, and Savage who
introduced him to the work of the Pre-Raphaelites and the English
illustrators. From 1915-1918 he served with the Royal Welch
Fusiliers and in 1919-21 attended Westminster School of Art
under Bayes and Meninsky where he was influenced by Blake and
El Greco. In 1921 he was received into the Catholic Church and
he made his first visit to Eric Gill in Ditchling. He subsequently
moved to Ditchling, becoming a member of the Third Order of
St.Joseph and St.Dominic and learning wood engraving from Desmond
Chute.
In 1924
he moved to North Wales with Gill and in 1925 painted at Caldy
Island. He was elected to the Society of Wood Engravers in 1927
and in 1929 he worked at Rock Hall, Northumberland, the home
of Helen Sutherland, but a breakdown in 1932 prevented him from
painting until 1936. A period working in London was followed
by another breakdown in 1946-7.
He first
exhibited with Eric Gill at St.George’s Gallery in 1927, subsequently
showing with the 7 & 5 Society from 1928 to 1933, at the Goupil
Gallery in 1929 and at leading London galleries, His work was
exhibited at the Venice Biennale in 1951, and at the Tate Gallery
1954-5 and 1981.
He is
represented in many public collections including the Tate Gallery
and he was created CBE in 1955 and CH in 1974. His wood engravings,
influenced by Gill, include illustrations for The Chester Play
of the Deluge, 1927, and other publications for the Golden Cockerel
Press, whilst his own writings include In Parenthesis, 1937,
for which he was awarded the Hawthornden Prize, and The Anathemata,
1952.
His
art is essentially religious, expressing the spiritual character
of landscape and figures. He evolved an idiosyncratic, elegant
and complex visual language using areas of transparent watercolour
and many fine lines to build up a wealth of detail and allusion.
In his intricate subject pictures he wove together mythological
and Christian iconography in order to express his spiritual
vision.