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Leslie Hunter

George Leslie Hunter (7 August 1877 – 7 December 1931) was a Scottish painter, regarded as one of the four artists of the Scottish Colourists group of painters.[1][2] Christened simply George Hunter, he adopted the name Leslie in San Francisco,[3] and Leslie Hunter became his professional name. Showing an aptitude for drawing at an early age, he was largely self-taught, receiving only elementary painting lessons from a family acquaintance. He spent fourteen years from the age of fifteen in the US, mainly in California.[4] Hunter made an extended trip to Scotland, Paris and New York from 1903–1905. In 1906 he left San Francisco and returned to Scotland, painting and drawing there, notably in Fife and at Loch Lomond. Subsequently he travelled widely in Europe, especially in the South of France, but also in the Netherlands, the Pas de Calais and Italy. He also returned to New York in 1924 and 1928–1929.[4]

George Leslie Hunter
The Beach, Largo, at Low Tide, date unknown, Aberdeen Art Gallery & Museums
Born(1877-08-07)7 August 1877
Died(1931-12-07)7 December 1931
Glasgow, Scotland
NationalityScottish
Known forGraphic artist; Artist in paper media & Oils
MovementPost-Impressionism
AwardsArtist Member of Glasgow Art Club
Patron(s)T.J. Honeyman, Alexander Reid, Matthew Justice
Dr Tom J Honeyman by Leslie Hunter c.1930

Hunter painted a variety of still-lifes, landscapes and portraits, and his paintings are critically acclaimed for their treatment of light and the effects of light.[5] Except, what Hunter set out to do was not about light, but to capture the essence of nature through pure colour.[6][7] His paintings became popular with more progressive critics and collectors during his lifetime and have grown to command high prices since his death, becoming among the most popular in Scotland.[5]

Biography

Early life

Hunter was born in Rothesay, at 7 Tower Street, on the Isle of Bute on 7 August 1877. He was the youngest child of five, born to William and Jeanie (née Stewart) Hunter. George, as he was then known, showed an aptitude for drawing when very young and when he was about thirteen, his mother arranged for him to have painting lessons with a lady acquaintance.[4] In February 1892, Hunter's elder sister Catherine died. Shortly after, in March, another elder sibling, James, also died. Both were in their early twenties. It is thought they may have been victims of an influenza pandemic. William, the father, and Jeanie, seem already to have contemplated emigrating, because a home had been sold. Evidently, the tragic deaths sealed the matter, and the remaining family departed for California via New York on 1 September 1892, aboard the SS Ethiopia.[4]

Emigration to California and move to San Francisco, leaving parents

Hunter was fifteen when he emigrated with his parents and two surviving siblings to California.[8] Initially, he lived with his family on an orange grove, 50 miles east of Los Angeles. He continued sketching and loved the climate, but showed little interest in farm management. Hunter moved from Los Angeles to San Francisco in 1899 and began making a living primarily as a newspaper and journal illustrator.[4] He counted among his friends and acquaintances, journalist Will Irwin, early photographer Arnold Genthe, poet Gelett Burgess, as well as significant literary figures such as Bret Harte and Jack London, all members of the San Francisco Bohemian Club.[4] Hunter provided illustrations for Overland Monthly. In 1899, a full-page black and white drawing for Overland Monthly is signed G. Leslie Hunter, the first recorded occasion of his use of "Leslie." In 1902, Hunter became part of a group of artists that included Maynard Dixon, Gottardo Piazzoni, Xavier Martinez and Arthur Putnam. Together they founded the California Society of Arts, the short-lived alternative to the conservative San Francisco Art Association.[4] Clearly, Hunter had a completely different artistic exposure compared with others of the Scottish Colourists group, such as John Duncan Fergusson or Samuel John Peploe. Hunter was at this stage quite a successful American graphic artist, considering his young age. "Sunset, The Pacific Monthly", was another journal commissioning his work and altogether, Smith & Marriner[4] catalogue over two hundred publication and book illustrations commissioned from Hunter.

Beginnings in fine art

 
Figures in conversation, Étaples, one of the paintings from 1914 in which Hunter established his style

In 1904, Hunter made a visit to Paris, funded by his earnings as an illustrator. He was inspired by the numerous artistic experiences there, and became fully resolved to take up oil painting.[9][10] When he returned to San Francisco in 1905, he began preparing for his first solo exhibition, which was to be held the following year. However, Hunter's early work was destroyed in the fire that followed the 1906 San Francisco earthquake, and he returned to Scotland shortly afterwards, settling in Glasgow.[11] Initially he continued to make his living there primarily as an illustrator. His oil painting began with still lifes on black backgrounds, influenced by the Dutch style.[10]

In 1908, whilst back in Paris, Hunter met Alice Toklas, whom he had known previously in San Francisco.[4] She took him to see the art collection at 27 rue de Fleurus, that was being started by Gertrude Stein and her brother Leo Stein. The collection included wildly-coloured Fauve works by Matisse, and early works by Picasso. Toklas wrote that the pictures shocked Hunter profoundly, and he wished he had never gone to see the them. Nevertheless his consciousness had been jolted.[4]

In November 1913 the influential art dealer Alexander Reid gave Hunter his first one-man-show, at his gallery at West George Street. It was popular but the public did not have any real understanding of his sense of colour and line.[12] At the show Hunter was probably introduced to the Dundee collector John Tattersall.[13] Through Reid, Hunter most likely first met William McInnes of Gow, Harrison & Company (shipbuilders) who became a close friend and patron to Hunter.[4] McInnes went on to buy 23 works in total.[14]

Hunter's landscape style began to change after visits to Etaples in 1913 and 1914, although Hunter did not necessarily appear to be part of the existing Etaples art colony.[15] Here, inspired by French art and the local landscape, he began to develop the style and ability that would later identify him as a colourist.[16] However, with the onset of the First World War Hunter was forced to leave Paris and return to Scotland.[17] Hunter had become an American citizen in 1906 and conscription was not introduced until early 1916. Possibly in response to the government's urging able-bodied men and women to help with the war effort, Hunter moved from Glasgow to his cousin's farm near Larkhall where he worked on the land until the end of the war.[4][18]

In Scotland, Alexander Reid was acting as his agent, remaining in constant contact with him throughout the First World War.[19] In March 1916, Hunter held his second one-man exhibition with Reid in Glasgow.[20] Hunter's work at this stage of his career focused primarily on still lifes, inspired by Chardin, Kalf and Manet.[9] During the 1920s, Hunter began to be associated with a group of three other artists: John Duncan Fergusson, F. C. B. Cadell, and Samuel Peploe. The four of them became known as the Scottish Colourists, although the term was not used until 1948, by which time only Fergusson was still alive.[5]

In July 1917 (through Reid) the collector William Burrell bought his first Hunter: "Peaches" for 10 guineas and in September 1917 bought a still life for £38.[21]

European travel and return to Fife

In 1922, Hunter began to make a series of trips to mainland Europe, where he visited Paris, Venice, Florence and the Riviera. Fergusson accompanied him on a number of these visits.[8] Hunter's visits abroad produced a large number of paintings and his style changed noticeably in this period of European travel as he began using dabs of colour placed instinctively to portray underlying form.[22]

When Hunter returned from his first series of trips abroad, in 1922, he settled in Fife, on the east coast of Scotland and, between 1924 and 1927, he remained in Scotland, dividing his time between Fife and Glasgow.[22] His paintings from this period include a number inspired by views of Loch Lomond, and these landscapes increasingly took inspiration from the work of Cézanne to create colourful and atmospheric compositions.[1][20][22] In 1925, Hunter's work was displayed at an exhibition in Leicester Square in London, along with works by Peploe, Cadell and Fergusson. Walter Sickert, in his introduction to the exhibition, wrote that "Hunter uses the refractory ... to inspired ends on normal and traditional lines".[23]

Hunter travelled again to the South of France on a number of occasions between 1927 and 1929, and based himself at Saint-Paul-de-Vence. He sent paintings back to Reid to be exhibited in Glasgow and London, but he spent a great deal of time sketching and his output of finished oil paintings was low. One exhibition in London had to be postponed due to a lack of paintings.[22] The France trips culminated in 1929 with a critically acclaimed exhibition at the Ferargil Galleries in New York.[24]

London, ill-health and death

However, shortly after returning to the French Riviera in 1929, Hunter suffered a severe breakdown, forcing his sister to bring him home to Scotland in September. He recovered, and began to paint a number of portraits of his friends, including one of Dr Tom Honeyman, the Director of the Glasgow Art Gallery and Museum from 1939 until 1954.[22][25] Honeyman, at the time an art dealer, had assisted Hunter in developing his career, and painting the portrait may have been a gesture of thanks.[26]

In 1930 he embarked upon a series of drawings and watercolours of Hyde Park, which were due to be exhibited in London. Hunter hoped to move to the city permanently, as he found it livelier than Glasgow and the art market was more secure.[1][24] However, his health deteriorated and he began to suffer badly from stomach pains.[24] He died in Glasgow in the Claremont Nursing Home on 7 December 1931, aged 54. The cause of death was cardiac failure due to blood poisoning, following an unsuccessful gall bladder operation.[4] A member of Glasgow Art Club, work by Hunter was included in the club's Memorial Exhibition of 1935, in memory of those of its members who had died since the First World War.[27]

Popularity

Hunter's paintings were popular with critics during his lifetime, and he had successful exhibitions in Glasgow, London and New York.[10] Shortly before his death, the Glasgow Herald commented that while Hunter was already "well known as a painter of landscape and still-life," his move to portrait painting would "cause a good deal of interest and discussion."[28]

Many years after his death, solo exhibitions of Hunter's paintings were still held and, in 1953, the display of a selection of watercolours and paintings in Glasgow attracted numerous visitors. The art critic of the Glasgow Herald described the "varied and uneven genius" of the painter, and praised one painting as having been executed with "such a freedom and economy of touch one cannot well see how any amount of extra thought or technical application could have bettered it."[29]

Paintings by Hunter have gone on to sell for large sums in the early 21st century, with one painting described as the "star lot" in a Bonhams auction in June 2010 selling for £144,000.[30] Another painting was sold in June 2010 for £78,000. Nick Curnow, head of pictures at Lyon & Turnbull, said of it "This is a very special painting, so typical of Hunter."[31]

Style

Hunter focused for much of his life on landscapes and on still lifes, working in both pen and ink and oil on canvas. His still lifes of fruit are particularly distinctive, but he also painted a variety of landscapes, especially of Scotland and France.[32] In his earlier paintings, Hunter was influenced by Cézanne to produce domestic landscapes. Later, however, in common with the other members of the Scottish colourists movement, he was heavily influenced by contemporary French artists like Monet[33] and Matisse, and his paintings began to make bolder and more energetic use of colour.[1]

Hunter particularly strove to capture in his paintings the effects of light, and would repeatedly paint the same objects or locations under a range of lighting conditions.[25] His brush style was influenced by the French avant garde and, especially in his later work, is described by art critics as '"open and free" and "energetic".[26][34]

References

  1. ^ a b c d "The Scottish Colourists". Explore Art. Retrieved 8 December 2010.
  2. ^ Billcliffe, Roger (1996). The Scottish colourists: Cadell, Fergusson, Hunter and Peploe. Murray, J. pp. 76–80. ISBN 0-7195-5437-3.
  3. ^ Cornwell, Tim (21 July 2012). "The true colours of Scottish painter George Leslie Hunter". The Scotsman.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Smith, Bill; Marriner, Jill (2012). Hunter revisited – The life and work of Leslie Hunter. Atelier Books, Edinburgh. ISBN 978-1-873830-23-9.
  5. ^ a b c . National Galleries of Scotland. Archived from the original on 3 December 2010. Retrieved 9 December 2010.
  6. ^ Honeyman, T.J. (1937). Introducing Leslie Hunter. Faber & Faber Ltd
  7. ^ "George Leslie Hunter: a brilliant Scottish colourist". ArtUK.
  8. ^ a b . Richard Green (Fine Paintings). Archived from the original on 18 July 2011. Retrieved 9 December 2010.
  9. ^ a b Mackenzie, Jill C. The Scottish Colourists: Hunter. Duncan R Miller Fine Arts. p. 3.
  10. ^ a b c . Portland Gallery. Archived from the original on 10 October 2010. Retrieved 9 December 2010.
  11. ^ "(George) Leslie Hunter". scottish-places.info. Retrieved 9 December 2010.
  12. ^ Alexander Reid in Context by Frances Fowle vol.1
  13. ^ Alexander Reid in Context by Frances Fowle vol.1
  14. ^ Alexander Reid in Context by Frances Fowle vol.1
  15. ^ Ogston, Derek (2004). Leslie Hunter Paintings and Drawings of France and Italy. Baillieknowe Publishing. ISBN 0-9538590-4-5
  16. ^ See his "Beach figures" 2 December 2013 at the Wayback Machine and the related "Figures in Conversation".
  17. ^ Honeyman, T.J. (1937). Introducing Leslie Hunter. Faber & Faber Ltd
  18. ^ Honeyman, T.J. (1937). Introducing Leslie Hunter. Faber & Faber Ltd
  19. ^ Alexander Reid in Context by Frances Fowle vol.1
  20. ^ a b . The Scottish Gallery. Archived from the original on 17 June 2012. Retrieved 9 December 2010.
  21. ^ Alexander Reid in Context by Frances Fowle vol.1
  22. ^ a b c d e Mackenzie, Jill C. The Scottish Colourists: Hunter. Duncan R Miller Fine Arts. p. 4.
  23. ^ Sickert, Walter (2000). The Complete Writings on Art. Oxford University Press. p. 504. ISBN 0-19-817225-7.
  24. ^ a b c "George Leslie Hunter". MG Fine Art. Retrieved 9 December 2010.
  25. ^ a b "George Leslie Hunter". Glasgow Museums. Retrieved 9 December 2010.
  26. ^ a b (PDF). 2006. Archived from the original (PDF) on 19 July 2011. Retrieved 9 December 2010.
  27. ^ Glasgow Herald article 9 April 1935 ‘’Glasgow Art Club – Memorial Exhibition Opened’’ Retrieved 17 August 2011
  28. ^ "Mr Leslie Hunter's Portraits". Glasgow Herald. 11 June 1931. Retrieved 8 December 2010.
  29. ^ "Show of Paintings by Leslie Hunter". Glasgow Herald. 16 October 1953. Retrieved 8 December 2010.[dead link]
  30. ^ . Paul Fraser Collectibles. 16 July 2010. Archived from the original on 20 July 2010. Retrieved 8 December 2010.
  31. ^ . Lyon & Turnbull. Archived from the original on 14 July 2011. Retrieved 9 December 2010.
  32. ^ "George Leslie Hunter: a brilliant Scottish Colourist". ArtUK.
  33. ^ "Monet, Leslie Hunter and the pursuit of colour". ArtUK.
  34. ^ Glynn, Susannah (2007). (PDF). Bonhams. Archived from the original (PDF) on 8 March 2012. Retrieved 9 December 2010.

External links

  • 98 artworks by or after Leslie Hunter at the Art UK site
  • Leslie Hunter at artcyclopedia.com
  • Biography of & artworks by George Leslie Hunter at the Gracefield Arts Centre in Dumfries, Scotland virtual representation of the Gracefield Arts Centre's Permanent Collection at exploreart.co.uk

leslie, hunter, church, england, bishop, bishop, other, people, hunter, disambiguation, george, august, 1877, december, 1931, scottish, painter, regarded, four, artists, scottish, colourists, group, painters, christened, simply, george, hunter, adopted, name, . For the Church of England bishop see Leslie Hunter bishop For other people see Les Hunter disambiguation George Leslie Hunter 7 August 1877 7 December 1931 was a Scottish painter regarded as one of the four artists of the Scottish Colourists group of painters 1 2 Christened simply George Hunter he adopted the name Leslie in San Francisco 3 and Leslie Hunter became his professional name Showing an aptitude for drawing at an early age he was largely self taught receiving only elementary painting lessons from a family acquaintance He spent fourteen years from the age of fifteen in the US mainly in California 4 Hunter made an extended trip to Scotland Paris and New York from 1903 1905 In 1906 he left San Francisco and returned to Scotland painting and drawing there notably in Fife and at Loch Lomond Subsequently he travelled widely in Europe especially in the South of France but also in the Netherlands the Pas de Calais and Italy He also returned to New York in 1924 and 1928 1929 4 George Leslie HunterThe Beach Largo at Low Tide date unknown Aberdeen Art Gallery amp MuseumsBorn 1877 08 07 7 August 1877Rothesay Isle of ButeDied 1931 12 07 7 December 1931Glasgow ScotlandNationalityScottishKnown forGraphic artist Artist in paper media amp OilsMovementPost ImpressionismAwardsArtist Member of Glasgow Art ClubPatron s T J Honeyman Alexander Reid Matthew JusticeDr Tom J Honeyman by Leslie Hunter c 1930 Hunter painted a variety of still lifes landscapes and portraits and his paintings are critically acclaimed for their treatment of light and the effects of light 5 Except what Hunter set out to do was not about light but to capture the essence of nature through pure colour 6 7 His paintings became popular with more progressive critics and collectors during his lifetime and have grown to command high prices since his death becoming among the most popular in Scotland 5 Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life 1 2 Emigration to California and move to San Francisco leaving parents 1 3 Beginnings in fine art 1 4 European travel and return to Fife 1 5 London ill health and death 2 Popularity 3 Style 4 References 5 External linksBiography EditEarly life Edit Hunter was born in Rothesay at 7 Tower Street on the Isle of Bute on 7 August 1877 He was the youngest child of five born to William and Jeanie nee Stewart Hunter George as he was then known showed an aptitude for drawing when very young and when he was about thirteen his mother arranged for him to have painting lessons with a lady acquaintance 4 In February 1892 Hunter s elder sister Catherine died Shortly after in March another elder sibling James also died Both were in their early twenties It is thought they may have been victims of an influenza pandemic William the father and Jeanie seem already to have contemplated emigrating because a home had been sold Evidently the tragic deaths sealed the matter and the remaining family departed for California via New York on 1 September 1892 aboard the SS Ethiopia 4 Emigration to California and move to San Francisco leaving parents Edit Hunter was fifteen when he emigrated with his parents and two surviving siblings to California 8 Initially he lived with his family on an orange grove 50 miles east of Los Angeles He continued sketching and loved the climate but showed little interest in farm management Hunter moved from Los Angeles to San Francisco in 1899 and began making a living primarily as a newspaper and journal illustrator 4 He counted among his friends and acquaintances journalist Will Irwin early photographer Arnold Genthe poet Gelett Burgess as well as significant literary figures such as Bret Harte and Jack London all members of the San Francisco Bohemian Club 4 Hunter provided illustrations for Overland Monthly In 1899 a full page black and white drawing for Overland Monthly is signed G Leslie Hunter the first recorded occasion of his use of Leslie In 1902 Hunter became part of a group of artists that included Maynard Dixon Gottardo Piazzoni Xavier Martinez and Arthur Putnam Together they founded the California Society of Arts the short lived alternative to the conservative San Francisco Art Association 4 Clearly Hunter had a completely different artistic exposure compared with others of the Scottish Colourists group such as John Duncan Fergusson or Samuel John Peploe Hunter was at this stage quite a successful American graphic artist considering his young age Sunset The Pacific Monthly was another journal commissioning his work and altogether Smith amp Marriner 4 catalogue over two hundred publication and book illustrations commissioned from Hunter Beginnings in fine art Edit Figures in conversation Etaples one of the paintings from 1914 in which Hunter established his style In 1904 Hunter made a visit to Paris funded by his earnings as an illustrator He was inspired by the numerous artistic experiences there and became fully resolved to take up oil painting 9 10 When he returned to San Francisco in 1905 he began preparing for his first solo exhibition which was to be held the following year However Hunter s early work was destroyed in the fire that followed the 1906 San Francisco earthquake and he returned to Scotland shortly afterwards settling in Glasgow 11 Initially he continued to make his living there primarily as an illustrator His oil painting began with still lifes on black backgrounds influenced by the Dutch style 10 In 1908 whilst back in Paris Hunter met Alice Toklas whom he had known previously in San Francisco 4 She took him to see the art collection at 27 rue de Fleurus that was being started by Gertrude Stein and her brother Leo Stein The collection included wildly coloured Fauve works by Matisse and early works by Picasso Toklas wrote that the pictures shocked Hunter profoundly and he wished he had never gone to see the them Nevertheless his consciousness had been jolted 4 In November 1913 the influential art dealer Alexander Reid gave Hunter his first one man show at his gallery at West George Street It was popular but the public did not have any real understanding of his sense of colour and line 12 At the show Hunter was probably introduced to the Dundee collector John Tattersall 13 Through Reid Hunter most likely first met William McInnes of Gow Harrison amp Company shipbuilders who became a close friend and patron to Hunter 4 McInnes went on to buy 23 works in total 14 Hunter s landscape style began to change after visits to Etaples in 1913 and 1914 although Hunter did not necessarily appear to be part of the existing Etaples art colony 15 Here inspired by French art and the local landscape he began to develop the style and ability that would later identify him as a colourist 16 However with the onset of the First World War Hunter was forced to leave Paris and return to Scotland 17 Hunter had become an American citizen in 1906 and conscription was not introduced until early 1916 Possibly in response to the government s urging able bodied men and women to help with the war effort Hunter moved from Glasgow to his cousin s farm near Larkhall where he worked on the land until the end of the war 4 18 In Scotland Alexander Reid was acting as his agent remaining in constant contact with him throughout the First World War 19 In March 1916 Hunter held his second one man exhibition with Reid in Glasgow 20 Hunter s work at this stage of his career focused primarily on still lifes inspired by Chardin Kalf and Manet 9 During the 1920s Hunter began to be associated with a group of three other artists John Duncan Fergusson F C B Cadell and Samuel Peploe The four of them became known as the Scottish Colourists although the term was not used until 1948 by which time only Fergusson was still alive 5 In July 1917 through Reid the collector William Burrell bought his first Hunter Peaches for 10 guineas and in September 1917 bought a still life for 38 21 European travel and return to Fife Edit In 1922 Hunter began to make a series of trips to mainland Europe where he visited Paris Venice Florence and the Riviera Fergusson accompanied him on a number of these visits 8 Hunter s visits abroad produced a large number of paintings and his style changed noticeably in this period of European travel as he began using dabs of colour placed instinctively to portray underlying form 22 When Hunter returned from his first series of trips abroad in 1922 he settled in Fife on the east coast of Scotland and between 1924 and 1927 he remained in Scotland dividing his time between Fife and Glasgow 22 His paintings from this period include a number inspired by views of Loch Lomond and these landscapes increasingly took inspiration from the work of Cezanne to create colourful and atmospheric compositions 1 20 22 In 1925 Hunter s work was displayed at an exhibition in Leicester Square in London along with works by Peploe Cadell and Fergusson Walter Sickert in his introduction to the exhibition wrote that Hunter uses the refractory to inspired ends on normal and traditional lines 23 Hunter travelled again to the South of France on a number of occasions between 1927 and 1929 and based himself at Saint Paul de Vence He sent paintings back to Reid to be exhibited in Glasgow and London but he spent a great deal of time sketching and his output of finished oil paintings was low One exhibition in London had to be postponed due to a lack of paintings 22 The France trips culminated in 1929 with a critically acclaimed exhibition at the Ferargil Galleries in New York 24 London ill health and death Edit However shortly after returning to the French Riviera in 1929 Hunter suffered a severe breakdown forcing his sister to bring him home to Scotland in September He recovered and began to paint a number of portraits of his friends including one of Dr Tom Honeyman the Director of the Glasgow Art Gallery and Museum from 1939 until 1954 22 25 Honeyman at the time an art dealer had assisted Hunter in developing his career and painting the portrait may have been a gesture of thanks 26 In 1930 he embarked upon a series of drawings and watercolours of Hyde Park which were due to be exhibited in London Hunter hoped to move to the city permanently as he found it livelier than Glasgow and the art market was more secure 1 24 However his health deteriorated and he began to suffer badly from stomach pains 24 He died in Glasgow in the Claremont Nursing Home on 7 December 1931 aged 54 The cause of death was cardiac failure due to blood poisoning following an unsuccessful gall bladder operation 4 A member of Glasgow Art Club work by Hunter was included in the club s Memorial Exhibition of 1935 in memory of those of its members who had died since the First World War 27 Popularity EditHunter s paintings were popular with critics during his lifetime and he had successful exhibitions in Glasgow London and New York 10 Shortly before his death the Glasgow Herald commented that while Hunter was already well known as a painter of landscape and still life his move to portrait painting would cause a good deal of interest and discussion 28 Many years after his death solo exhibitions of Hunter s paintings were still held and in 1953 the display of a selection of watercolours and paintings in Glasgow attracted numerous visitors The art critic of the Glasgow Herald described the varied and uneven genius of the painter and praised one painting as having been executed with such a freedom and economy of touch one cannot well see how any amount of extra thought or technical application could have bettered it 29 Paintings by Hunter have gone on to sell for large sums in the early 21st century with one painting described as the star lot in a Bonhams auction in June 2010 selling for 144 000 30 Another painting was sold in June 2010 for 78 000 Nick Curnow head of pictures at Lyon amp Turnbull said of it This is a very special painting so typical of Hunter 31 Style EditHunter focused for much of his life on landscapes and on still lifes working in both pen and ink and oil on canvas His still lifes of fruit are particularly distinctive but he also painted a variety of landscapes especially of Scotland and France 32 In his earlier paintings Hunter was influenced by Cezanne to produce domestic landscapes Later however in common with the other members of the Scottish colourists movement he was heavily influenced by contemporary French artists like Monet 33 and Matisse and his paintings began to make bolder and more energetic use of colour 1 Hunter particularly strove to capture in his paintings the effects of light and would repeatedly paint the same objects or locations under a range of lighting conditions 25 His brush style was influenced by the French avant garde and especially in his later work is described by art critics as open and free and energetic 26 34 References Edit a b c d The Scottish Colourists Explore Art Retrieved 8 December 2010 Billcliffe Roger 1996 The Scottish colourists Cadell Fergusson Hunter and Peploe Murray J pp 76 80 ISBN 0 7195 5437 3 Cornwell Tim 21 July 2012 The true colours of Scottish painter George Leslie Hunter The Scotsman a b c d e f g h i j k l m Smith Bill Marriner Jill 2012 Hunter revisited The life and work of Leslie Hunter Atelier Books Edinburgh ISBN 978 1 873830 23 9 a b c 50 interesting facts about the Gallery of Modern Art National Galleries of Scotland Archived from the original on 3 December 2010 Retrieved 9 December 2010 Honeyman T J 1937 Introducing Leslie Hunter Faber amp Faber Ltd George Leslie Hunter a brilliant Scottish colourist ArtUK a b George Leslie Hunter 1877 Rothesay 1931 Glasgow Richard Green Fine Paintings Archived from the original on 18 July 2011 Retrieved 9 December 2010 a b Mackenzie Jill C The Scottish Colourists Hunter Duncan R Miller Fine Arts p 3 a b c George Leslie Hunter Portland Gallery Archived from the original on 10 October 2010 Retrieved 9 December 2010 George Leslie Hunter scottish places info Retrieved 9 December 2010 Alexander Reid in Context by Frances Fowle vol 1 Alexander Reid in Context by Frances Fowle vol 1 Alexander Reid in Context by Frances Fowle vol 1 Ogston Derek 2004 Leslie Hunter Paintings and Drawings of France and Italy Baillieknowe Publishing ISBN 0 9538590 4 5 See his Beach figures Archived 2 December 2013 at the Wayback Machine and the related Figures in Conversation Honeyman T J 1937 Introducing Leslie Hunter Faber amp Faber Ltd Honeyman T J 1937 Introducing Leslie Hunter Faber amp Faber Ltd Alexander Reid in Context by Frances Fowle vol 1 a b George Leslie Hunter The Scottish Gallery Archived from the original on 17 June 2012 Retrieved 9 December 2010 Alexander Reid in Context by Frances Fowle vol 1 a b c d e Mackenzie Jill C The Scottish Colourists Hunter Duncan R Miller Fine Arts p 4 Sickert Walter 2000 The Complete Writings on Art Oxford University Press p 504 ISBN 0 19 817225 7 a b c George Leslie Hunter MG Fine Art Retrieved 9 December 2010 a b George Leslie Hunter Glasgow Museums Retrieved 9 December 2010 a b Friends of Glasgow Museums PDF 2006 Archived from the original PDF on 19 July 2011 Retrieved 9 December 2010 Glasgow Herald article 9 April 1935 Glasgow Art Club Memorial Exhibition Opened Retrieved 17 August 2011 Mr Leslie Hunter s Portraits Glasgow Herald 11 June 1931 Retrieved 8 December 2010 Show of Paintings by Leslie Hunter Glasgow Herald 16 October 1953 Retrieved 8 December 2010 dead link George Leslie Hunter s 150 000 Colourist painting comes alive at Bonhams Paul Fraser Collectibles 16 July 2010 Archived from the original on 20 July 2010 Retrieved 8 December 2010 Glasgow Family s Colourist Still Life Makes 78 000 Lyon amp Turnbull Archived from the original on 14 July 2011 Retrieved 9 December 2010 George Leslie Hunter a brilliant Scottish Colourist ArtUK Monet Leslie Hunter and the pursuit of colour ArtUK Glynn Susannah 2007 Around the Regions PDF Bonhams Archived from the original PDF on 8 March 2012 Retrieved 9 December 2010 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Leslie Hunter painter 98 artworks by or after Leslie Hunter at the Art UK site Leslie Hunter at artcyclopedia com Biography of amp artworks by George Leslie Hunter at the Gracefield Arts Centre in Dumfries Scotland virtual representation of the Gracefield Arts Centre s Permanent Collection at exploreart co uk Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Leslie Hunter amp oldid 1131743183, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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