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Robert Boyd Morrison (1896-1969) THE BATHERS signe

Currency:EUR Category:Everything Else / Other Start Price:NA Estimated At:20,000.00 - 30,000.00 EUR
Robert Boyd Morrison (1896-1969) THE BATHERS signe

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Auction Date:2005 Feb 22 @ 18:00 (UTC)
Location:Ireland
Robert Boyd Morrison (1896-1969) THE BATHERS signed and dated [1936] lower right oil on canvas 61 by 91cm., 24 by 36in. Provenance: The artist’s nephew, Alan Morrison, by descent; Private collection, London Born in Belfast, Boyd Morrison left school at an early age to work as an apprentice to the lithographer Samuel Leighton, attending classes by night at the Belfast College of Art. Upon the outbreak of WWI he enlisted with the Royal Irish Fusiliers and in 1917 was wounded at Messines. He spent a year in hospital before receiving a rehabilitation grant which allowed him to enrol at the Slade School of Art in London. There he was influenced by the famous Professor Tonks, who is reputed to have asked the young Irishman to stay on as a teacher, an offer which Morrison declined. A drawing done by Morrison whilst at the Slade sold through these rooms (13 March 2001, lot 219); another work dated 1923 is in the Slade School collection, UCL. Throughout the 1920s Morrison associated with many avant-garde artists in London including William Nicholson, Paul Nash and Randolph Schwabe, all of whom were fellow Slade graduates and contributors to The Robes of Thespis, a book on theatre costume design which was jointly edited by Morrison and George Sheringham and published in 1928. The original watercolours for Morrison’s designs for this book are in the collection of the V&A. Max Beerbohm was another good friend and contributor to the book. In the UK Morrison exhibited at London’s Goupil Gallery and with the RA, the RSA and the National Society of Painters, Sculptors, Engravers and Potters, of which he was a founding member. By 1926 he had returned to live in Belfast and six years later had a solo show of some fifty works at Belfast’s Locksley Hall. In 1940 he contributed a work to the RHA from an address in Bangor, Co. Down. The following year he moved to Leamington, Warwickshire, where during the war his studio was destroyed by fire, an event said to have left him depressed. After this he focused primarily on teaching and portrait commissions. He painted portraits of his neighbour, the Conservative MP and Foreign Secretary (later Prime Minister), Anthony Eden, and those of his family; the Earl of Spencer was another patron. He left Warwickshire in 1948 and returned to Bangor, where he ran private art classes and taught the mural painter Sidney Smith among others. The present work, with its rounded and carefully outlined forms, is characteristic of that produced by many Slade School graduates and is comparable to work of the same period by Mark Gertler and John Luke.