Natalie Bevan | |
Birth Name: | Natalie Alice Ackenhausen |
Birth Date: | 22 May 1909 |
Birth Place: | Kensington, London, England |
Death Place: | Great Horkesley, Essex, England |
Occupation: | Artist, muse, and collector |
Spouse: | |
Children: | 2 |
Natalie Alice Bevan (; 22 May 190915 August 2007), was a British artist, muse, and collector. She has been called, "one of the most beautiful and charismatic women of her generation".
She was born Natalie Alice Ackenhausen on 22 May 1909 at 2 Pembroke Cottages, Edwardes Square, Kensington, London, the eldest of three children of Kurt Bernhard Heinrich Carl Ackenhausen (1878/79–1954),a German textile merchant, and his wife, Alice Katherine Inchbold Ackenhausen, née Denny (d. 1964/65), a children's book illustrator.[1] During the First World War, the family took up her mother's surname, Denny, and her father changed his given name to Court.[1]
She was painted by Mark Gertler when she was aged 19, a 1928 portrait entitled Supper.[2]
She was a painter and ceramicist.[3]
On 24 August 1929, she married the writer and pioneering radio and television producer Lancelot de Giberne Sieveking (1896–1972), and they had two daughters, the artist Victoria Burroughs (1930–1988) and the photographer Anthea Sieveking (born 1933).[1] Their marriage was dissolved in 1939.
On 11 July 1946, she married the advertising executive Bobby Bevan (1901-1974), the son of the painters Robert Polhill Bevan and Stanislawa de Karlowska, and they lived in Knightsbridge, London, and at Boxted House in Boxted, Essex.[1] [4] In 1957, she became involved in a ménage à trois with Randolph Churchill, which continued until his death in 1968.[5] [6]
On 26 March 1986, she married the sailor and writer Samuel Barclay (1920–2000).[1]
She died on 15 August 2007, at Great Horkesley Manor, a nursing home in Great Horkesley, and was buried at St Peter's Church, Boxted, Essex.[1]