Ruskin Spear, CBE, RA (30 June 1911 – 16 January 1990) was an English painter and teacher of art, regarded as one of the foremost British portrait painters of his day.[4][5] He is the father of Bonzo Dog Doo-Dah Band member Roger Ruskin Spear.
Biography
Early life and education
Born in Hammersmith to a working-class family, Spear was the youngest of five children. Spear contracted polio at the age of two,[6] and later attended the local Brook Green (PD) School, a London County Council school for the "Physically Defective".[7] Awarded an LCC scholarship to the Hammersmith School of Art,[8] Spear followed on with studies at the Royal College of Art, where he later was made a Royal Academician and tutor. Spear attended the local art school before going on to the Royal College of Art in 1930.
Teaching
He began his teaching career at Croydon School of Art, later teaching at the Royal College of Art from 1948 to 1975, where his students included Sandra Blow.[9]
Art
Initially influenced by Walter Sickert, the Camden Town Group, and the portraiture of the Euston Road School, his work often has a narrative quality, with elements of humour and satire. As one of the thirty eight Official War Artists in Britain in the Second World War,[10] between 1942 and 1944, Spear was commissioned by the War Artists' Advisory Committee,[11] under the chairmanship of Kenneth Clark, given a short-term contract, producing several works for the scheme.[12]
Because he used a wheelchair due to childhood polio, much of his work concerned his immediate surroundings. He rendered the citizens of Hammersmith relaxing in and around the local pubs, theatres and shops. In 1980, a retrospective of Spear's work was held at the Royal Academy in London.
^"The Contemporary Situation". The Burlington Magazine. 97 (627). Burlington Magazine Publications Ltd.: 164 June 1955. JSTOR871633. Retrieved 25 January 2022 – via JSTOR.
^Harrod, Tanya (2022). Harrison, Martin (ed.). Humankind: Ruskin Spear – class, culture and art in 20th century Britain. Studies in Art. London: The Estate of Francis Bacon Publishing; Thames & Hudson Limited. ISBN978-0-500-97119-2.
^ abFoss, Brian (2007). War Paint: Art, War, State and Identity in Britain, 1939–1945. Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in British Art; Yale University Press. pp. 70–71, 105. ISBN9780300108903.
Harrod, Tanya (2022). Harrison, Martin (ed.). Humankind: Ruskin Spear – class, culture and art in 20th century Britain. London: EFB Publishing/Thames & Hudson.
Levy, Mervyn (1985). Ruskin Spear. London : Weidenfeld and Nicolson.