Private Collection

Gluck (1895 - 1978)

A Cornish Farmhouse, circa 1926

SKU: 4783

Inscribed (reverse) in the artist’s hand ‘Cornish Farm House’ and signed ‘Gluck’.

Oil on panel, 10 x 14 in. (25.4 x 35.6 cm.)

Presentation:
framed

Size:
Height – 25.4cm x Width – 35.6cm

DESCRIPTION

Provenance:
The Artist’s Estate; Peyton Skipwith

In original Gluck frame.

The artist Gluck was the daughter of
Joseph Gluckstein, one of the founders Jo.Lyons & Co of Corner House
fame, and the American singer Francesca Halle.   Refusing to follow
family conventions she insisted on becoming an artist and in 1916 she
made her first visit to Lamorna in Cornwall where she met Alfred
Munnings, Harold and Laura Knight and Dod and Ernest Proctor, later, in
the 1920s, buying the Knights’ studio.   Returning to London she was
befriended by Gordon Selfridge who gave her a studio in his store where
she painted ‘one-sitting’ portraits.   She had her first solo exhibition
in 1924 at the Dorien Leigh Gallery, owned by the renowned photographer
E.O. Hoppé, whose iconic photographs of her with cropped hair, smoking a
cheroot and dressed in a Saville Row suit appeared in many magazines
(one was included in the recent Hoppé exhibition at the National
Portrait Gallery).  

Gluck became a quintessential Art Deco
figure with major exhibitions at The Fine Art Society in the 1920s and
30s, designing her own frames – and even the gallery on one occasion –
working closely with Constance Fry, one of her many famous lovers, and
the architect Oliver Hill.   During the 1930s she shared a studio in
Cheslea with the American painter Romaine Brooks, but towards the end of
the decade she gave up painting and devoted her time and formidable
energy to fighting a battle with all the paint manufacturing companies
of the world, claiming they were altering the composition of artists’
materials.   Feeling vindicated she returned to painting and her 1973
exhibition at the Fine Art Society was a triumph, being hailed by
critics, museum curators and collectors, and firmly re-establishing her
reputation as one of the major figures of her period.

We are grateful to Peyton Skipwith for assistance.

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THE ARTIST

Gluck
Gluck
1895 - 1978

Gluck (born Hannah Gluckstein) was born into a wealthy Jewish family, the child of Joseph Gluckstein, whose brothers Isidore and Montague had founded J. Lyons and Co., a British coffee house and catering empire. Gluck’s American-born mother, Francesca Halle, was an opera singer. Gluck’s brother, Sir Louis Gluckstein, was a Conservative politician.

In the 1920s and 30s Gluck became known for portraits and floral paintings; the latter were favoured by the interior decorator Syrie Maugham. Gluck insisted on being known only as Gluck, “no prefix, suffix, or quotes”, and when an art society of which Gluck was vice president identified Gluck as “Miss Gluck” on its letterhead, Gluck resigned. Gluck identified with no artistic school or movement and showed Gluck’s work only in solo exhibitions, where they were displayed in a special frame Gluck invented and patented. This Gluck-frame rose from the wall in three tiers; painted or papered to match the wall on which it hung, it made the artist’s paintings look like part of the architecture of the room.

One of Gluck’s best-known paintings, Medallion, is a dual portrait of Gluck and Gluck’s lover Nesta Obermer, inspired by a night in 1936 when they attended a Fritz Busch production of Mozart’s Don Giovanni. According to Gluck’s biographer Diana Souhami, “They sat in the third row and she (sic) felt the intensity of the music fused them into one person and matched their love.” Gluck referred to it as the “YouWe” picture. It was later used as the cover of a Virago Press edition of The Well of Loneliness. Gluck also had a romantic relationship with the British floral designer Constance Spry, whose work informed the artist’s paintings.

In 1944 Gluck moved to Chantry House in Steyning, Sussex, where she lived with her lover Edith Shackleton Heald until her death.

In the 1950s Gluck became dissatisfied with the artist’s paints available and began a “paint war” to increase their quality. Ultimately, Gluck persuaded the British Standards Institution to create a new standard for oil paints; however, the campaign consumed Gluck’s time and energy to the exclusion of painting for more than a decade.

In Gluck’s seventies, using special handmade paints supplied free by a manufacturer who had taken Gluck’s exacting standards as a challenge, Gluck returned to painting and had another well-received solo show. It was Gluck’s first since 1937, and Gluck’s last: Gluck died in 1978.

Gluck’s last major work was a painting of a decomposing fish head on the beach entitled Rage, Rage against the Dying of the Light.

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