Sir Alan BownessCBE (11 January 1928 – 1 March 2021)[1] was a British art historian, art critic, and museum director. He was the director of the Tate Gallery between 1980 and 1988.
In 1957 Bowness began teaching at the Courtauld Institute of Art. He became a Reader in 1967 and a professor in 1978. His popular book Modern European Art (1972) has been translated into French, German, Italian, and Korean.
During the 1960s, Bowness co-curated two major exhibitions of contemporary art at the Tate Gallery, London, 54:64 Painting and Sculpture of a Decade (1964) (with Lawrence Gowing) and Recent British Painting (1967) (with Norman Reid and Lilian Somerville). During the 1960s and 1970s he also curated exhibitions for the Arts Council, including Vincent van Gogh (1968), Rodin (1970), French Symbolist Painters (1972), and Gustave Courbet (1978, with Michel Laclotte), as well as Post-Impressionism (Royal Academy, London and National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C., 1979–80). Retrospectives he curated of contemporary artists for the Tate Gallery include; Ivon Hitchens (1963), Jean Dubuffet (1966), Peter Lanyon (1968), and William Scott (1972).
Between 1960 and 1970, Bowness published complete catalogues of the sculpture of Barbara Hepworth. Following the artist's death in 1975, Bowness ran the Hepworth Estate. In accordance with Hepworth's wishes, he oversaw the opening of her former house and studio in St Ives as the Barbara Hepworth Museum and Sculpture Garden in 1976.[3] Since 2008 the Hepworth Estate has been run by his daughter, art historian Sophie Bowness.
Tate Gallery (1980–1988)
Between 1980 and 1988 Bowness was Director of the Tate Gallery. During this time he realised the expansion of Tate's Millbank site by creating the Clore Wing to display the work of J.M.W. Turner, uniting the collection which had been divided between the British Museum and the Tate. He instigated the creation of Tate Liverpool, which opened in May 1988. At a time when the Tate's public grant had been capped, Bowness established patrons’ groups to fund the purchase of historic and contemporary work. The Tate's collection of post-war American and European art grew especially substantially during this time. Bowness also began the preparations for the Tate St Ives (opened in 1993).
The Turner Prize was established under Bowness's directorship in 1984 as an initiative to foster interest in contemporary British art.[4]
Later life and honours
After retiring from the Tate, Bowness became Director of the Henry Moore Foundation, setting up the Henry Moore Institute in Leeds, Yorkshire. He was made a CBE in 1976 and knighted in 1988.[5][6] He was also an Honorary Fellow of the Royal College of Art, the Courtauld Institute of Art, and Downing College, Cambridge.
Bowness died at his home in London on 1 March 2021, at age 93.[7]
Publications
Bowness's publications include:
Introduction, Four English Middle Generation Painters: Heron / Frost / Wynter / Hilton (Waddington Galleries, May 1959).
Catalogue of works in J.P. Hodin, Barbara Hepworth (Lund Humphries, 1961).
William Scott: Paintings (Lund Humphries, 1964).
Henry Moore: Complete Sculpture, vol. 2 (Lund Humphries, revised edition, 1965) to vol. 6 (Lund Humphries, 1988).
Alan Davie (Lund Humphries, 1967).
Peter Lanyon (Tate Gallery, 1968).
‘Vincent in England’ and catalogue, Vincent van Gogh (Hayward Gallery, 1968).
The Complete Sculpture of Barbara Hepworth 1960–69 (Lund Humphries, 1971).
Gauguin (Phaidon, 1971).
Modern European Art (Thames & Hudson, 1972).
Ivon Hitchens (Lund Humphries, 1973).
Victor Pasmore: with a catalogue raisonné of the paintings, constructions and graphics, 1926-1979 (Thames & Hudson, 1980), with Luigi Lambertini.
The Conditions of Success: How the Modern Artist Rises to Fame (Thames & Hudson, 1989), based on the Walter Neurath Memorial Lecture, 1989.
Poetry and Painting: Baudelaire, Mallarmé, Apollinaire, and their Painter Friends (Clarendon Press, 1994), based on the Zaharoff Lecture for 1991–2.
‘Ten Good Years’ in Generation Painting 1955–65: British Art from the Collection of Sir Alan Bowness (The Heong Gallery at Downing College, Cambridge, 2016).
Memories of Barbara, Ben and the St Ives Modernists (2017, Porthmeor Studios, St Ives).
References
^The Times 10 January 2009, Retrieved 9 January 2010
^Generation Painting 1955–65: British Art from the Collection of Sir Alan Bowness (The Heong Gallery at Downing College, Cambridge, 2016), p.81.
^'From Studio to Museum: the creation of the Barbara Hepworth Museum’ in Sophie Bowness, Barbara Hepworth: The Sculptor in the Studio (Tate Publishing, 2017), pp.87–128.
^Spalding, Frances The Tate: A History (Tate Gallery Publishing, 1998).