David Gommon

David Gommon

Self portrait, Circa 1932
Born (1913-12-12)12 December 1913
Battersea, London
Died 20 January 1987(1987-01-20) (aged 73)
Northampton
Nationality English
Known for painter

David Gommon (12 December 1913 20 January 1987) was a British painter born in Battersea, South London.

Early life and education

David Gommon was born on 12 December 1913 in Battersea in South London. His father was a Londoner, a journeyman carpenter. At the age of 16 he was enrolled in Battersea Polytechnic and the Clapham School of Art. He was able to visit art galleries of the Netherlands to study the paintings of the great masters. He met art collector, Lucy Carrington Wertheim and, when he was 18-19, she became his patron paying £2 a week for his work.[1]

Career

It was through Lucy Wertheim that he held his first one-man show at her gallery in Burlington Gardens, and attracted positive critical attention. During this time he met many other patrons of the arts and he painted the young dancers Margot Fonteyn and Robert Helpmann at Saddlers Wells. He was part of the 20s group supported by Lucy Wertheim that included Christopher Wood, Barbara Hepworth, Roger Hilton, Robert Medley, Phelan Gibb, David Burton, Humphrey Slater and Victor Pasmore.[2]

In his own work he gradually focussed on the essence of the English and Welsh landscapes. In 1938 he stopped painting altogether.

Teaching

His first teaching job at Northampton Grammar School[3] where he worked and taught pupils, including actor/artist Jonathan Adams,[4] of whom he completed a portrait.[5] While here he painted until he retired. He would often paint reproductions of famous paintings to illustrate his lessons; the sets for the schools regular theatrical productions would be designed, painted and constructed in his art room.

In the 1960s he delivered WEA Lectures on Art for a number of years, in Northampton and the county. His last commission, the two large murals at St. Crispin's hospital, Northampton, arose from this conviction.

Personal life

During the Second World War his spinal curvature rendered him unfit for military service, he served in the London Auxiliary fire service. During the war he had met and married Jean Vipond. He died in 1987.

Reviews

Art critic Ian Mayes summed up this aspect of his work in his review of his 1975 exhibition at St Catharine's College, Cambridge.

“I know of few artists whose work communicates such a sense of joy in life as that which comes from these beautifully quiet, very modest and English paintings, so accurate in their evocation of the changing moods and feeling of nature. The landscapes (which together with the related paintings of enclosed gardens and cricket matches I consider to be his finest work) show that in his use of colour and simplified shapes he has found a personal and eloquent language, perfectly suited to its purpose; and an important part of that purpose is the expression of wonderment and delight in nature.“

Exhibitions

His work forms part of the permanent collections at;

Exhibitions have also been shown at:-

Bibliography

References

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