Robert Clatworthy (sculptor)

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Robert Clatworthy
Chelsea School of Art
  • Slade School of Fine Art
  • Known forsculpture, painting
    ElectedRA, 26 April 1973
    Websiterobertclatworthy.co.uk

    Robert Ernest Clatworthy

    RA (31 January 1928 – 15 or 16 March 2015) was a British sculptor and teacher of art. He was head of the fine art department at the Central School of Art and Design in London from 1971 to 1975, and was elected a fellow of the Royal Academy of Arts
    in 1973.

    Life

    Clatworthy's Bull in the Alton Estate council housing estate in Roehampton, in south-west London

    Clatworthy was born at

    Chelsea School of Art in London, where he studied under Bernard Meadows, and then in 1950–51 went to the Slade School of Fine Art.[3][1] He worked briefly as an assistant to Henry Moore;[4] it was Moore who persuaded him to attend the Slade rather than the Royal College of Art.[1]

    In the early 1950s Clatworthy was, with Anthony Caro, Elisabeth Frink and Eduardo Paolozzi, among the young sculptors brought in by Frank Martin to teach in the new sculpture department at Saint Martin's School of Art.[5] In 1956 he joined The London Group.[6] From 1960 until 1972 he taught at the Royal College of Art and, between 1967 and 1971, also at the West of England College of Art. He was a governor of Saint Martin's from 1970 to 1971, and then, until 1975, head of the fine art department at Central.[3]

    He was elected a

    Royal Academician on 26 April 1973.[3]

    Clatworthy was married twice: in 1954 to Pamela Gordon, the daughter of Gertrude Lawrence,[1] with whom he had two sons and a daughter, and from whom he was divorced; and in 1989 to Jane Illingworth Stubbs.[7] After the break-up of his first marriage in the 1970s he moved with his new wife to an isolated farmhouse at Cynghordy, near Llandovery, in southern Wales, where he spent his later life as a recluse.[2]: 92 [7]: 330  He died on 15[4][8] or 16 March 2015.[1][9]

    Work

    Clatworthy is considered one of the informal

    Picasso.[8][10]

    His work is in the collections of the

    Two of his works are installed as public art: a Bull commissioned by the London County Council in 1956–57 is now in the Alton Estate council housing estate in Roehampton, in south-west London; and Horseman and Eagle, commissioned in 1984–85 for a new office block at 1 Finsbury Avenue in the City, is now in the grounds of Charing Cross Hospital in Hammersmith.[4]

    In about 1990 Clatworthy developed a skin infection which prevented him from working in plaster, and turned to painting,[12] mostly figures and portraits of unidentified people.[2]: 92  He returned to sculpture in 2002.[12]

    Reception

    In the 1950s Clatworthy was among the best-known sculptors in Britain. The critic

    Tate Gallery bought the first of two of his bull sculptures in the same year. His reputation later faded.[4]

    References

    1. ^ a b c d e Christopher Masters (30 March 2015). Robert Clatworthy obituary. The Guardian. Retrieved June 2015.
    2. ^ a b c d e George Newson (2015). In memoriam: Robert Clatworthy RA. RA Magazine (127), Summer 2015.
    3. ^ a b c d Robert Clatworthy RA: Profile. The Royal Academy. Retrieved June 2014.
    4. ^ a b c d e [s.n.] (20 March 2015). Robert Clatworthy, sculptor – obituary. The Telegraph. Retrieved March 2015.
    5. ^ Malcolm Le Grice (2011). History Lessons. frieze Issue 142, October 2011. Retrieved June 2014.
    6. . (subscription required).
    7. ^ .
    8. ^ a b Peter Davies (28 May 2015). Robert Clatworthy: Sculptor whose powerful pieces, including Grade II-listed 'Bull', walked the line between figuration and abstraction. The Independent. Retrieved June 2015.
    9. ^ Clatworthy, Robert Ernest. Who Was Who. London: A & C Black; online edition: Oxford University Press. Retrieved April 2017. (subscription required)
    10. ^ [s.n.] (1959). Sculpture: Arp, Butler, César, Clatworthy, Effront, Giacometti, Kemeny, Maillol, Marini, Matisse, Picasso, Sager (exhibition catalogue). London: Hanover Gallery.
    11. ^ Elisabeth Frink: 1 portrait by Robert Clatworthy. National Portrait Gallery. Retrieved March 2015.
    12. ^ a b Will Bennett (27 January 2003). Object of the week: Robert Clatworthy's Head. The Telegraph. Retrieved June 2014.

    Further reading

    • Keith Chapman (2012). Robert Clatworthy: Sculpture and Drawings. Bristol: Sansom & Co. .