James Doyle PenroseRHAJP (9 May 1862 – 2 January 1932) was an Irishpainter known for his religious and mythological paintings.[1][2] He was the father of psychiatrist and mathematician Lionel Penrose and of artist Roland Penrose and the grandfather of mathematical physicist Roger Penrose.[3]
Penrose left Ireland with his father and family about 1890 to settle in Hertfordshire near London. He exhibited his work regularly at the Royal Academy of Arts in London from the 1890s until 1927. He travelled extensively in Canada.
They had a strict upbringing at Oxhey Grange, Watford. James Doyle Penrose owned the wider Oxhey Grange Estate. In its development of Watford Heath, he included the Rose Tea Cottage and Gardens, in an attempt to attract the local workforce away from the nearby public houses. Penrose was appointed a deputy lieutenant of Cambridgeshire on 15 October 1903.[4]
His wife Elizabeth aged 72 died in July 1930 at Watford.[5] He died in Bognor Regis on Saturday 2 January 1932.[6]
Legacy
Penrose is known primarily for his religious and mythological paintings. Other works include paintings of the Woad industry based near the Wisbech, Isle of Ely home of his inlaws, and a sculpture of his father in law.[7]
A black and white photograph of James and his wife is in the online collection of the National Trust.[8]
^Mr. J. D. Penrose (Obituaries) The Times Monday, Jan 04, 1932; pg. 17; Issue 46021; col B
^'PENROSE, J. Doyle', Who Was Who, A & C Black, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc, 1920–2008; online edn, Oxford University Press, Dec 2007 accessed 23 Oct 2013