Gwen John (Q58506): Difference between revisions

From Semantic Name Authority Repository Cymru
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(‎Removed claim: National Library of Wales Authority ID (P12): john-gwen-1876-1939-diaries)
(‎Removed claim: National Library of Wales Authority ID (P12): john-gwen-1876-1939-drama)
Property / National Library of Wales Authority ID
 
Property / National Library of Wales Authority ID: john-gwen-1876-1939-drama / rank
Normal rank
 

Revision as of 20:55, 10 December 2023

Welsh painter (1876-1939)
  • Gwendolyn Mary John
  • Gwendoline Mary John
  • Gwendolen Mary John
  • Gwendolen John
Language Label Description Also known as
English
Gwen John
Welsh painter (1876-1939)
  • Gwendolyn Mary John
  • Gwendoline Mary John
  • Gwendolen Mary John
  • Gwendolen John

Statements

0 references
0 references
0 references
0 references
0 references
0 references
0 references
0 references
0 references
0 references
0 references
Gwendolen Mary (Gwen) John (1876-1939), painter, was born in Haverfordwest, Pembrokeshire. She was the sister of fellow artist Augustus John (1878-1961). Between 1895 and 1898 she was a pupil at the Slade School of Fine Art in London, alongside her brother. During her time there she befriended other female artists including Ursula Tyrwhitt and Ida Nettleship, who later married Augustus. She studied at the Academie Carmen in Paris in 1898 and settled permanently in Paris from 1904. In the same year she met, and began a stormy relationship with, the sculptor Auguste Rodin. She was introduced by Augustus to the American lawyer and collector John Quinn and his companion Jeanne Robert Foster. Amongst her circle of friends was the revolutionary, feminist and actress Maud Gonne and Dorelia McNeill, who became Augustus's lifelong companion. In her later years she formed an attachment to the Russian-Jewish émigré Véra Oumançoff, who lived near her in the Paris suburb of Meudon. The majority of her paintings were of women or girls and, from 1913 when she was received into the Catholic church, ecclesiastically-themed works. She was exhibited in Paris, London and New York. It is believed that she ceased to produce any works of art after about 1933. Gwen John died in Dieppe, France, in 1939.Her nephew Edwin John (1905-1978), son of Augustus, was the chief executor of her will. Following John's death her artistic reputation was revived by numerous exhibitions both in Britain and the United States, beginning with the memorial exhibition at the Matthiesen Gallery, London, in 1946.
0 references
0 references
0 references