Sir Lawrence Burnett GowingCBERA (21 April 1918 – 5 February 1991) was an English artist, writer, curator and teacher. Initially recognised as a portrait and landscape painter, he quickly rose to prominence as an art educator, writer, and eventually, curator and museum trustee. He was described as a prominent member of the "English Establishment".[1] As a student of art history he was largely self-taught.[2]
In the 1940s he became recognised as a painter, and for the rest of his life was sought after to paint casual but quintessential portraits of the eminent, among whom were Clement Attlee, Lord Halifax, Veronica Wedgwood and Edgar Adrian. At the same time he continued a lifelong practice of open-air landscape painting that he learned from Maurice Feild at school. He was a protege of the Bloomsbury art critic Clive Bell.[1]
After a long partnership and marriage with the writer Julia Strachey, a member of the Bloomsbury Group, he married Jenny Wallis in 1967.[2] They had three daughters.[1]