Dennis Creffield Explained

Dennis Creffield
Birth Name:Dennis Richard Creffield
Birth Date:1931 1, df=y
Birth Place:London, England
Death Place:Brighton, England
Nationality:British
Field:painting, drawing, teaching
Website:https://denniscreffield.org/

Dennis Creffield (29 January 1931 – 26 June 2018) was a British artist with work owned by major British and worldwide art collections, including the Tate Gallery, The British Museum, Arts Council of England, the Government Art Collection, The Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Leeds City Art Gallery, University of Leeds collection, Williams College Museum of Art, University of Brighton collection, Swindon Art Gallery collection and others.

He died at the age of 87, and was buried in the Bear Road (City) Cemetery in Brighton.

Early life and education

Creffield was born in London, and studied at the Borough Polytechnic under David Bomberg from 1948 to 1951,[1] during which time he exhibited as a member of the Borough Group, which included Bomberg and fellow students Cliff Holden, Dorothy Mead, Miles Peter Richmond and Leslie Marr. He later studied at the Slade School of Art, part of the University of London from 1957 to 1961, where he won the Tonks Prize for Life Drawing and the Steer Medal for Landscape Painting.[2] In 1961 he was first prizewinner in the John Moores Prize Exhibition, at the Walker Art Gallery in Liverpool. In the same year he showed work in an Arts Council of Great Britain national touring exhibition, Six Young Painters. Then, in 1964, he was recommended to the University of Leeds by the eminent art theorist Herbert Read to become the Gregory Fellow in Art, a post he held from 1964 to 1966.[3] It was whilst a Gregory Fellow that Creffield began teaching, both at the University of Leeds and Leeds College of Art, and he was subsequently to teach at various art colleges in Britain and abroad, including the University of Brighton, University for the Creative Arts and the Cyprus College of Art.

Work and commissions

In 1985, Creffield was commissioned by the Arts Council to draw every cathedral in England, a task undertaken by living in a camper van for two years. This resulted in the exhibition 'English Cathedrals' at the Hayward Gallery, London, which subsequently toured Britain (1988–1990),[4] and a related book written by Creffield.[5] Six of these drawings, including 'Peterborough: Approaching the West Front' and several views of Canterbury Cathedral were acquired by the Tate Gallery in 1990. A very positive review by the distinguished writer on art, Peter Fuller, of a touring exhibition of Creffield's drawings of English cathedrals appeared in the first issue of the journal, Modern Painters (then edited by Fuller, its founder), together with an essay by Roy Oxlade on their teacher, David Bomberg.

After the cathedrals of England, further series of drawings were commissioned, including the cathedrals of northern France, shown at the Albemarle Gallery in London in 1991. In 2005, Flowers Gallery, London, staged a major retrospective exhibition and published a catalogue including a foreword by novelist Howard Jacobson and a conversation between Dennis & Professor Lynda Morris.[6] Creffield's importance as a contemporary draughtsman was also recognised in 2008 when he was included in the exhibition 'Drawn from the Collection, 400 Years of British Drawing' at Tate Britain. In 2011 he staged a major exhibition entitled ‘Jerusalem’ at James Hyman Gallery, inspired by the city and by William Blake's great poem. A great critical and commercial success, Creffield considered the show to be the climax of his career

Creffield's work was greatly admired by fellow artists and writers such as R. B. Kitaj, Peter Redgrove, Edward Lucie-Smith, Henri Cartier-Bresson, Regina Derieva,[7] Howard Jacobson and Peter Ackroyd.

He was represented for many years by James Hyman Gallery in London and his estate is now represented by Waterhouse & Dodd in London.

See also

Films

Selected bibliography

External links

Notes and References

  1. A Lasting Legacy . Connected . Spring 2009 . 6 . 11–13 . . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110807120203/https://alumni.lsbu.ac.uk/downloads/connected/connectedIssue6.pdf . 7 August 2011 .
  2. David Buckman, Artists in Britain Since 1945 (London: Art Dictionaries Ltd., 1998) 350
  3. Hilary Diaper, 'The Gregory Fellowships', in Benedict Read (ed.), Herbert Read: A British Vision of World Art, (London: Lund Humphries 1993) 134
  4. R. Adam, 'Drawing lessons: English cathedrals drawn by Dennis Creffield', in The Architects' Journal, Vol. 12, 1988, 81
  5. Dennis Creffield, English Cathedrals (London: South Bank Centre, 1987)
  6. Web site: Dennis Creffield Biography – James Hyman: Fine Art and Photographs.
  7. Web site: The Regina Derieva Web Site.
  8. Web site: Looking into Paintings – Dennis Creffield. 28 June 2018.
  9. Web site: The Invisible Recorder – Dennis Creffield's East Anglian Cathedrals. 9 March 2014.
  10. Web site: November 8, 2019.
  11. News: Back to the drawing board. Taylor. John Russell.
  12. Web site: 'England's most closely guarded secret'. The Spectator.
  13. Web site: Dennis Creffield. 21 February 2014.
  14. Web site: Tribute paid to Dennis Creffield. Antiques Trade Gazette.
  15. Web site: Dennis Creffield, le peintre des cathédrales.