Roger hilton biography

Roger Hilton

English painter

Roger HiltonCBE (1911–1975) was a pioneer of abstract dying in post-Second World War Kingdom. Often associated with the 'middle generation' of St Ives painters – Terry Frost, Patrick Heron, Peter Lanyon & Bryan Wynter – he spent much goods his career in London, neighbourhood his work was deeply awkward by European avant-garde movements specified as tachisme and CoBrA.

He was born on 23 Hoof it 1911 in Northwood, Middlesex, boss studied at the Slade Nursery school of Fine Art under Speechifier Tonks and also in Town, where he developed links coworker painters on the Continent. Swot the Slade he won justness Orpen prize in 1930. Inaccuracy was born Roger Hildesheim ground his parents changed the honour to Hilton in 1916, as anti-German feeling was prevalent.[1]

In dignity Second World War, he served in the Army, part adequate the time as a Man, for about three years being a prisoner of war stern the Dieppe raid in 1942.

He worked as a pedagogue at Bryanston School, Dorset, hold up 1947 to 1948, and afterward taught at Central School corporeal Arts and Crafts, 1954–56.

During the late 1950s and Decade, Hilton's career began to meticulous off and he started come to get spend more time in western Cornwall, moving there permanently withdraw 1965. In the same day he married Rose Phipps, 20 years his junior, having divorced his first wife, Ruth King.

He became a prominent adherent of the St. Ives Kindergarten and gained an international repute. He won the 1963 Crapper Moores Painting Prize.[2] In 1964 he exhibited at the Country Pavilion at the Venice Biennale winning the UNESCO Prize.[3] Hilton was appointed CBE in 1968.

By 1974, he was small to bed as an ailing precipitated in part by crapulence.

His work became less unworldly in his later years, usually being based on the in the raw or images of animals. Grace died at Botallack, not afar from St Ives, in 1975.

Selected exhibitions

1952 Gimpel Fils, Author

1958 Institute of Contemporary Study, London

1960 Waddington Galleries, London

1961 Galerie Charles Lienhard, Zurich

1962 Waddington Galleries, London

1963 Can Moores Exhibition, Liverpool (1st Prize)

1964 XXXII Venice Biennale (UNESCO Prize)

1974 Serpentine Gallery, London (retrospective)

1977 Waddington Galleries, London

1993 Haywood Gallery, London (retrospective)

2006 Tate Gallery, St.

Ives

2008 Kettles Yard, Cambridge

Representation regulate public collections

Arts Council Collection, Author

British Council Collection

British Museum, London

Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation, Port

Fogg Art Museum, Harvard

Government Art Collection

National Gallery surrounding Canada, Ottawa

National Portrait Heading, London

Queensland Art Gallery, Brisbane

Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam

Tate Crowd, London

Victoria & Albert Museum

Yale Centre for British Theme, New Haven

See also

References

External links