James Dickson Innes (27 February 1887 – 22 August 1914) was a Welsh painter, mainly of mountain landscapes but occasionally of figure subjects. He worked in both oils and watercolours.
Style
Of his style, art historian David Fraser Jenkins wrote: "Like that of the fauves in France and the expressionists in Germany, the style of his work is primitive: it is child-like in technique and is associated with the landscape of remote places."[2]
Biography
James Dickson Innes was born on 27 February 1887 in Llanelli, in south Wales.[4] His father, John Innes, who had come from Scotland, was an historian and had an interest in a local brass and copper works; his mother was of Catalan descent. He had two brothers, Alfred and Jack.
In 1911 Innes had a two-man exhibition with Eric Gill at the Chenil Gallery, London: "Sculptures by Mr Eric Gill and Landscapes by Mr J. D. Innes",[2][7] Innes also exhibited in the influential Armory Show in New York City, Chicago and Boston.[5] The Welsh politician and philanthropist Winifred Coombe Tennant (1874–1956) was an important patron of his work.[5]
In 1911 and 1912 he spent some time painting with Augustus John around Arenig Fawr in the Arenig valley in North Wales; John describes him thus in his memoirs, Chiaroscuro:[8]
He himself cut an arresting figure: a Quaker hat, a coloured silk scarf, and a long black overcoat, set off features of a slightly cadaverous cast, with glittering black eyes, a wide sardonic mouth, a prominent nose and a large bony forehead, invaded by streaks of thin black hair. He carried an ebony cane with a gold top, and spoke with a heavy English accent, which had been imposed on an agreeable Welsh sub-stratum.
Much of his work was done overseas, mainly in France (1908–1913), notably at Collioure, but also in Spain (1913) and Morocco (1913) – foreign travel having been prescribed after he was diagnosed with tuberculosis. On 22 August 1914, at the age of twenty-seven, he died of the disease at a nursing home in Swanley, Kent.
Legacy
Innes was unusual for a British artist of that time, because of his bold painting style, more attuned to the French Post-Impressionists. It has been argued his unusual style led the way for British artists such as David Hockney.[9]
In 2011 Innes and Augustus John's fascination with painting Arenig Fawr and the Arenig valley was the subject of a BBC Four documentary titled The Mountain That Had to Be Painted.[10]
^ abcdDutton, Peter (2014). "Dickie and Bryn – Llanelli Boys"(PDF). Friends of the Glynn Vivian Newsletter (Spring 2014): 3–4. Archived from the original(PDF) on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 5 November 2014.
J. D. Innes 1887–1914 [exhibition catalogue Llanelli Public Library Nevill Memorial Gallery] (1987)
Some Miraculous Promised Land: J. D. Innes, Augustus John and Derwent Lees in north Wales 1910–12 [exhibition catalogue, Mostyn Art Gallery, Llandudno] (1982)
James Dickson Innes [exhibition catalogue, Southampton City Art Gallery, et alib.] (1978)
Fraser Jenkins, David (1975). J. D. Innes at the National Museum of Wales. National Museum of Wales. ISBN0-7200-0055-6.
Modern English Painters Lewis to Moore by John Rothenstein (1956)
Augustus John, Chiaroscuro (1952)
David Boyd Haycock, Brilliant Destiny: The Age of Augustus John, London, UK: Lund Humphries, 2023.
J. Fothergill, James Dickson Innes (1948)
R. Schwabe, 'Reminiscences of Fellow Students', in The Burlington Magazine (1943 January)