Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Walter Sickert

 
Art Encyclopedia: Walter Richard Sickert

(b Munich, 31 May 1860; d Bathampton, Somerset, 22 Jan 1942). British painter, printmaker, teacher and writer of German birth. Sickert was one of the most influential British artists of this century. He is often called a painter's painter, appealing primarily to artists working in the figurative tradition; there are few British figurative painters of the 20th century whose development can be adequately discussed without reference to Sickert's subject-matter or innovative techniques. He had a direct influence on the Camden Town Group and the Euston Road School, while his effect on Frank Auerbach, Howard Hodgkin and Francis Bacon was less tangible. Sickert's active career as an artist lasted for nearly 60 years. His output was vast. He may be judged equally as the last of the Victorian painters and as a major precursor of significant international developments in later 20th-century art, especially in his photo-based paintings.

See the Abbreviations for further details.



Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
Biography: Walter Richard Sickert
Top

Walter Richard Sickert (1860-1942) was one of England's greatest impressionist painters. His cityscapes and music hall scenes were frequently based, compositionally, on Degas's paintings.

Walter Sickert was born in Munich to a Danish father, Oswald Sickert, a painter and journalistic draftsman, and an English mother. Oswald emigrated with his family to England in 1868 to keep his sons from being conscripted into the German army. In 1875 Walter enrolled at King's College in London. In 1881 he entered the Slade School in London, but he soon left to help James McNeill Whistler print his etchings. In 1883 Sickert, by then Whistler's apprentice, took a painting by Whistler to Paris, where he met Edgar Degas, whose devoted follower he became from then on. Sickert had come to feel that Whistler painted with too much surface facility.

In 1885 Sickert and his wife honeymooned in Dieppe. His scenes of Dieppe date from 1885, but especially after 1899 street scenes of Dieppe were a recurring subject. Sickert, especially from about 1895, was a prolific writer, and he also taught extensively. He visited Venice in 1895, in the winter of 1900/1901, and in 1903-1904, when he did views of St. Mark's Square. From 1900 to 1905 he lived mainly in France.

The years 1907-1914 were Sickert's Camden Town period, in which he showed forlorn people in dreary rooms with cheap Victorian furniture. In these works he used a thick and broken impasto, as in Girl Reading (1907) and Ennui (1913). In 1911 he founded an association of painters called the Camden Town group, most of whose members did not share his impressionistic leanings. From 1919 to 1922 Sickert lived in Dieppe and then settled permanently in London. He died in Bath.

Outside of Sickert and Sir William Orpen, England did not produce any first-rate painters who followed the lead of the French impressionists. Sickert, though often influenced by Degas not only in the choice of subject matter but also in the methods of cutting figures and in the choice of unusual viewpoints, nonetheless had his own flavor. In his many music hall scenes executed between 1887 and 1899, Sickert showed a greater interest in the audience than did Degas, and he had a preference for earthy, low-life, somewhat ribald types, such as the theatergoers in the Old Bedford, a Corner of the Gallery (ca. 1897). He was fascinated with the mundane, seamy side of English life, and he emphasized the dreary mood of his subject matter by low-keyed tones, in contrast to most of the work of the French impressionists.

Further Reading

The biographical study of Lillian Browse, Sickert (1960), shows Sickert as only peripherally dependent upon the French impressionists.

Additional Sources

Emmons, Robert, The life and opinions of Walter Richard Sickert, London: Lund Humphries, 1992, 1941.

Sutton, Denys, Walter Sickert: a biography, London: Joseph, 1976.

Woolf, Virginia, Walter Sickert: a conversation, Norwood, Pa.: Norwood Editions, 1978.

British History: Walter Richard Sickert
Top

Sickert, Walter Richard (1860-1942). British artist. Born in Munich, Sickert's Danish/Irish parents came to England in 1868. After a short career as an actor, he studied at the Slade School before joining the studio of Whistler through whom he met Degas, who became a close friend.

 
Columbia Encyclopedia: Walter Richard Sickert
Top
Sickert, Walter Richard, 1860-1942, English painter. After a brief career on the stage Sickert was apprenticed to Whistler and later worked with Degas. His preferred subjects were scenes of music halls and the London demimonde. Painting in deep, rich browns with vital, immediate brushwork, Sickert became celebrated for his personal and spontaneous works. He was a major link between French and English painting at the turn of the century.

Bibliography

See his posthumously published writings, A Free House (1947); studies by W. Baron (1973) and M. Lilly (1973).

Wikipedia: Walter Sickert
Top
Walter Sickert, photograph by George Charles Beresford, 1911

Walter Richard Sickert (May 31, 1860 – January 22, 1942) was a German-born English Impressionist painter and a member of the Camden Town Group. Sickert was a cosmopolitan and eccentric who favoured ordinary people and urban scenes as his subjects.

Contents

Life and work

Sickert was born in Munich, in Bavaria. His father, Oswald Sickert, was a Danish-German artist[1] and his mother Eleanor was the illegitimate daughter of the English astronomer Richard Sheepshanks. The family left Munich to settle in England at the time of the Great Exhibition, Oswald's work having been recommended by Freiherrin Rebecca von Kreusser to Ralph Nicholson Wornum, who was Keeper of the National Gallery at the time.[2] The young Sickert was sent to University College School from 1870-1871 before transferring to King's College School, Wimbledon, where he studied until the age of 18. Though he was the son and grandson of painters, he at first sought a career as an actor; he appeared in small parts in Sir Henry Irving's company, before taking up the study of art as assistant to James McNeill Whistler. He later went to Paris and met Edgar Degas, whose use of pictorial space and emphasis on drawing would have a powerful effect on Sickert's own work.

Portrait of the artist Walter Sickert in 1884.

He developed a personal version of Impressionism, favouring sombre colouration. Following Degas' advice, Sickert painted in the studio, working from drawings and memory as an escape from "the tyranny of nature".[3] Sickert's earliest major works were portrayals of scenes in London music halls, often depicted from complex and ambiguous points of view, so that the spatial relationship between the audience, performer and orchestra becomes confused, as figures gesture into space and others are reflected in mirrors. The isolated rhetorical gestures of singers and actors seem to reach out to no-one in particular, and audience members are portrayed stretching and peering to see things that lie beyond the visible space. This theme of confused or failed communication between people appears frequently in his art.

By emphasising the patterns of wallpaper and architectural decorations, Sickert created abstract decorative arabesques and flattened the three-dimensional space. His music hall pictures, like Degas' paintings of dancers and café-concert entertainers, connect the artificiality of art itself to the conventions of theatrical performance and painted backdrops. Many of these works were exhibited at the New English Art Club, a group of French-influenced realist artists with which Sickert was associated. At this period Sickert spent much of his time in France, especially in Dieppe where his mistress, and possibly his illegitimate son, lived.

Just before World War I he championed the avant-garde artists Lucien Pissarro, Jacob Epstein, Augustus John and Wyndham Lewis. At the same time he founded, with other artists, the Camden Town Group of British painters, named from the district of London in which he lived. This group had been meeting informally since 1905, but was officially established in 1911. It was influenced by Post-Impressionism and Expressionism, but concentrated on scenes of often drab suburban life; Sickert himself said he preferred the kitchen to the drawing room as a scene for paintings.[4] Sickert regularly portrayed figures placed ambiguously on the borderland between respectability and poverty. From 1908-1912 and again from 1915-1918 Sickert was an influential teacher at Westminster School of Art.

Portrait of Helen Carte, c. 1885

On 11 September 1907, Emily Dimmock, a part-time prostitute cheating on her partner, was murdered in her home at Agar Grove (then St Paul's Road), Camden, having gone there from the The Eagle public house, Royal College Street. After sex, the man had slit her throat open while she was asleep, then left in the morning.[5] The murder became an ongoing source of prurient sensationalism in the press.[5] For several years Sickert had already been painting lugubrious female nudes on beds, and continued to do so, deliberately challenging the conventional approach to life painting—"The modern flood of representations of vacuous images dignified by the name of 'the nude' represents an artistic and intellectual bankruptcy"—giving four of them, which included a male figure, the title, The Camden Town Murder, and causing a controversy, which ensured attention for his work.[5] These paintings do not show violence, however, but a sad thoughtfulness, explained by the fact that three of them were originally exhibited with completely different titles, one more appropriately being What Shall We Do for the Rent?, and the first in the series, Summer Afternoon.[5]

These and other works were painted in heavy impasto and narrow tonal range. Many other obese nudes were painted at this time, in which the fleshiness of the figures is connected to the thickness of the paint, devices that were later adapted by Lucian Freud.

Walter Sickert, The Camden Town Murder, originally titled, What Shall We Do for the Rent?,[5] alternatively, What Shall We Do to Pay the Rent,[6] 1908 (detail)

Sickert's interest in Victorian narrative genres also influenced his best known work, Ennui, in which a couple in a dingy interior gaze abstractedly into empty space, as though they can no longer communicate with each other. In his later work Sickert adapted illustrations by Victorian artists such as Georgie Bowers and John Gilbert, taking the scenes out of context and painting them in poster-like colours so that the narrative and spatial intelligibility partly dissolved. He called these paintings his "Echoes".[7] Sickert also executed a number of works in the 1930s based on news photographs, squared up for enlargement, with their pencil grids plainly visible in the finished paintings. Seen by many of his contemporaries as evidence of the artist's decline, these works are also the artist's most forward-looking, seeming to prefigure the practices of Chuck Close and Gerhard Richter.[8]

He is considered an eccentric figure of the transition from Impressionism to modernism, and as an important influence on distinctively British styles of avant-garde art in the 20th century.

One of Sickert's closest friends and supporters was newspaper baron Lord Beaverbrook, who accumulated the largest single collection of Sickert paintings in the world. This collection, with a private correspondence between Sickert and Beaverbook, is in the Beaverbrook Art Gallery in Fredericton, New Brunswick, Canada.

Sickert's sister was Helena Swanwick, a feminist and pacifist active in the women's suffrage movement.

Henry Tonks. Sodales: Mr Steer and Mr Sickert, 1930.

Sickert died in Bath, England in 1942 at the age of 81. He had been married three times. His first wife, Ellen Cobden, was a daughter of Richard Cobden. His third wife was the painter Thérèse Lessore.[9]

Jack the Ripper

Sickert took a keen interest in the Jack the Ripper crime and believed he had lodged in the room used by the infamous serial killer, having been told this by his landlady, who suspected a previous lodger. He painted the room, entitling it "Jack the Ripper's bedroom" and portraying it as a dark, brooding and almost unintelligible space. The painting is displayed in the Manchester City Art Gallery.[10]

In 1976, Stephen Knight's Jack the Ripper: The Final Solution claimed that Sickert had been forced to become an accomplice in the Ripper murders. Knight's information came from Joseph Gorman, who claimed to be Sickert's illegitimate child. Even though Gorman later admitted he had made up the tale, Knight's book is responsible for a popular conspiracy theory, which accuses royalty and freemasonry of complicity in the murders. Jean Overton Fuller, in Sickert and the Ripper Crimes (1990), went so far as to claim that Sickert was the actual killer. In 2002, crime novelist Patricia Cornwell, in Portrait of a Killer: Jack the Ripper - Case Closed, presented her theory that Sickert was responsible for the murders, one of the motivating factors being an alleged defect in his penis.[11] Cornwell purchased 31 of Sickert's paintings and it is charged that she destroyed one or more of them (a claim she denies)[12] searching for his DNA.[11] Cornwell claimed she was able to scientifically prove the DNA on a letter attributed to the Ripper and one written by Sickert belong to only one per cent of the population.[13] Sickert specialists and Ripperologists view Cornwell's theory with derision.[11]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Oswald Sickert biography, FADA
  2. ^ British National Archives
  3. ^ Baron and Shone, 1992, p. 57.
  4. ^ Baron and Shone, 1992, p. 156.
  5. ^ a b c d e Januszczak, Waldemar. "Walter Sickert - murderous monster or sly self-promoter?" The Times, 4 November 2007. Retrieved 13 September 2008.
  6. ^ "The Camden Town Murder", Fisher Fine Arts Library Image Collection. Retrieved 13 September 2008.
  7. ^ Morphet et al., 1981, pp. 102-103.
  8. ^ Schwartz, Sanford, 2002, "The Master of the Blur", The New York Review of Books, April 11, 2002, p. 16.
  9. ^ Portrait of the artist reveals a great eccentric - a review by Richard Shone of Matthew Sturgis's biography "Walter Sickert: A Life"; Weekend Australian, 12-13 March, 2005.
  10. ^ Manchestergalleries.org
  11. ^ a b c Gibbons, Fiachra. "Does this painting by Walter Sickert reveal the identity of Jack the Ripper?", The Guardian, 8 December 2001. Retrieved 13 September 2008.
  12. ^ TimesOnline.co.uk
  13. ^ Cornwell, Patricia. Otava, 2004

Bibliography

  • Browse, Lillian (1960). "Sickert". London: Rupert Hart-Davis.
  • Baron, Wendy; Shone, Richard, et al. (1992). Sickert Paintings. New Haven and London: Yale University Press. ISBN 0-300-05373-8
  • Morphet, Richard, et al. (1981). Late Sickert: Paintings 1927 to 1942. London: Arts Council of Great Britain. ISBN 0-7287-0301-7
  • Shone, Richard; Curtis, Penelope (1988). W R Sickert: Drawings and Paintings 1890-1942. Liverpool: Tate Gallery. ISBN 1-85437-008-1
  • Sitwell, Osbert, editor (1947). A Free House! or the artist as craftsman: Being the Writings of Walter Richard Sickert (Macmillan & co., London).
  • Sturgis, Matthew (2005). Walter Sickert: A Life. The latest biography of Sickert - in the final chapter Sturgis refutes the notion that Sickert was Jack the Ripper, but also claims that if Sickert were still alive he would enjoy his current notoriety.
  • Upstone, Robert (2008). Modern Painters: The Camden Town Group, exhibition catalogue, Tate Britain, London, 2008 ISBN 1854377817

External links


 
 
Learn More
David Bomberg (English artist)
James Wilson Morrice (art)
Evie (Sydney) Hone (art)

Who is Walter Griffen? Read answer...
Who is mykah walter? Read answer...
Who is Bradley Walters? Read answer...

Help us answer these
Who is Walter Butler?
What does walters mean?
Who was Walter Littmanns?

Post a question - any question - to the WikiAnswers community:

 

Copyrights:

Art Encyclopedia. The Concise Grove Dictionary of Art. Copyright © 2002 by Oxford University Press, Inc.. All rights reserved.  Read more
Biography. © 2006 through a partnership of Answers Corporation. All rights reserved.  Read more
British History. A Dictionary of British History. Copyright © 2001, 2004 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/ Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Walter Sickert" Read more