- Stephen Gilbert
Stephen Gilbert (
15 January 1910 –12 January 2007 ) was a British painter and sculptor. He was one of the few British artists to fully embrace theavante garde movement in Paris in the 1950s. [http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,60-2554069,00.html Stephen Gilbert | Times Online Obituary ] ]Early Years
Gilbert was born in
Wormit , in the north-east ofFife ,Scotland , of English parents. His father was a commander in theRoyal Navy ; his grandfather, SirAlfred Gilbert was theArt Nouveau sculptor ofEros inPiccadilly Circus .Education
He studied architecture at the
Slade School of Art in London from 1929 to 1932, where he befriended fellow studentRoger Hilton . Gilbert won the Slade Scholarship at the end of his first year, and the principal SirHenry Tonks encouraged him to start painting from 1930. He also met sculptorJocelyn Chewett at the Slade, and they were married in 1935.Career
He exhibited at the
Royal Academy in 1936, and put on an early solo show in London, at theWertheim Gallery in 1938. He moved toParis in 1937, where his wife studied underOssip Zadkine , leaving before the Second World War. He failed a medical for military service, and he spent the war inIreland nearDublin with his wife and son, Humphrey. He joinedThe White Stag group of refugee artists. His work was inspired byMasson , and by readingJung ,Nietzsche andJakob Böhme , with fantastic creatures and plants painted in vivid colours.He returned to Paris in 1946, after the birth of his daughter Frances. He exhibited at the
Salon des Surindépendents in Paris in 1948, attracting the attention of Danish artistAsger Jorn , and leading to his membership of the CoBrAavant-garde art group. He was one of only two British member, the other beingWilliam Gear . He was included in the first issue of the group's journal and participated in both major exhibitions: theBregnerød congress in August 1949, where he worked on the collective mural, and theAmsterdam exhibition at theStedelijk Museum in November of that year, where he worked withConstant Nieuwenhuys . A French art critic described him as "le plus français des sculpteurs anglais et l'un des plus européens parmi les artistes" ("the most French of British sculptors and the most European of artists").He also visited
Svanberg inSweden . After his contact with CoBrA, his approach to painting became more abstract, but he remained in contact withPierre Alechinsky after CoBrA dissolved. He exhibited several times at theSalon des Réalités Nouvelles .During the 1950s, he concentrated on three-dimensional and architectural forms, formed from sheets of
aluminium . He joinedAndré Bloc 'sGroupe Espace in 1954, exhibiting at theSalon de la Jeune Sculpture . He was also a founder of theNéovision group, and worked with experimental architectPeter Stead . He moved on to more curvilinear forms, exhibited at theDrian Galleries in London in 1961, and completed two public commissions in London. He received a Gulbenkian award in 1962, and the sculpture prize at theTokyo Biennale in 1965.His wife died in 1979, and his sculpture moved on from open forms to more enclosed structures. He returned to painting in the 1980s. Examples of his work are held by many public collections.
He died in
Frome, Somerset and was survived by his son and daughter.References
* [http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,60-2554069,00.html Obituary] , "
The Times ",19 January 2007 * [http://news.independent.co.uk/people/obituaries/article2180739.ece Obituary] , "
The Independent ,24 January 2007 * [http://www.guardian.co.uk/obituaries/story/0,,2012316,00.html Obituary] , "
The Guardian ,14 February 2007 External links
* [http://www.tate.org.uk/servlet/ArtistWorks?cgroupid=999999961&artistid=1165&page=1 Works in the Tate Collection]
* [http://www.henry-moore-fdn.co.uk/matrix_engine/content.php?page_id=2626&shop=257 2006 retrospective at Henry Moore Institute, Leeds ]
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