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Gilbert Spencer (1892 - 1979)

Self Portait, 1923

SKU: 5889
Signed, dated and inscribed: ‘to Charles and Dorothy, Amberside 1941’
Pencil on paper on board
12 5/8 x 8 1/2 in. (32 x 21.6 cm)
Presentation:
folio

Size:
Height – 32cm x Width – 21.6cm

DESCRIPTION

This self portrait was given to Charles Mahoney and Dorothy Bishop on the occasion of the marriage in 1941.
After the bombing of London during the Second World War, in 1940, it was decided that the Royal College should be moved from London to Ambleside in The Lake District.  The School of Paintings was taught by Gilbert Spencer, Percy Horton and Charles Mahoney.    Thus the  main Schools of Painting, Sculpture, Design and Engraving were allowed to continue through the War with  P.H.Jowett as Principal.  
.
In September 1941 Mahoney married Dorothy Bishop teacher of Calligraphy at the R.C.A in the Lake District.

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THE ARTIST

Gilbert Spencer
Gilbert
Spencer
1892 - 1979

Painter, especially of landscapes, draughtsman, teacher and writer, and brother of the painter Stanley Spencer. Born at Cookham, Berkshire. Spencer studied at Camberwell School of Arts and Crafts, woodcarving at the Royal College of Art, 1911-12, then with Fred Brown and Henry Tonks at the Slade School of Fine Art, 1913-20. Between 1915 and 1919 he served in the army. Spencer had his first one-man show at the Goupil Gallery in 1923; he also exhibited at the RA (he was elected RA in 1960), NEAC, (of which he was a member), Leicester Galleries, RSA, Redfern Gallery and many other venues. Although he produced notable wall paintings for Holywell Manor, Oxford, 1934-6, Spencer made his name as a landscape artist working mainly in the English southern counties. At various times he taught at the Royal College of Art, Glasgow School of Art and Camberwell, serving meanwhile as an Official War Artist, 1940-3. His book Stanley Spencer appeared in 1961 and his autobiography, Memoirs of a Painter, in 1974. A retrospective exhibition was held at Reading in 1964. The Tate and many other public collections hold his work. He sometimes just signed his work GS. He lived in Hampstead and towards the end of his life near Reading, Berkshire.

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