Roland Penrose

Actor

Popular As Roland Algernon Penrose

Birthday October 14, 1900

Birth Sign Libra

Birthplace London, England

DEATH DATE 1984-4-23, Chiddingly, East Sussex, England (83 years old)

Nationality United Kingdom

#47440 Most Popular

1862

Penrose was the son of James Doyle Penrose (1862–1932), a successful portrait painter, and Elizabeth Josephine Peckover, the daughter of Lord Peckover, a wealthy Quaker banker.

He was the third of four brothers; his older brother was the medical geneticist Lionel Penrose.

Roland grew up in a strict Quaker family in Watford and attended The Downs School, Colwall, Herefordshire, and then Leighton Park School, Reading, Berkshire.

1900

Sir Roland Algernon Penrose (14 October 1900 – 23 April 1984) was an English artist, historian and poet.

He was a major promoter and collector of modern art and an associate of the surrealists in the United Kingdom.

During the Second World War he put his artistic skills to practical use as a teacher of camouflage.

Penrose married the poet Valentine Boué and then the photographer Lee Miller.

1918

In August 1918, as a conscientious objector, he joined the Friends' Ambulance Unit, serving from September 1918 with the British Red Cross in Italy.

1922

After studying architecture at Queens' College, Cambridge, Penrose switched to painting and moved to France, where he lived from 1922 and where in 1925 he married his first wife the poet Valentine Boué.

During this period he became friends with the artists Pablo Picasso, Wolfgang Paalen and Max Ernst, who would have the strongest influence on his work and most of the leading Surrealists.

1934

Penrose and Boué's marriage had broken down in 1934, and they divorced in 1937.

1936

Penrose returned to London in 1936 and was one of the organisers of the London International Surrealist Exhibition, which led to the establishment of the English surrealist movement.

Penrose settled in Hampstead, north London, where he was the centre of the community of avant-garde British artists and emigres who had settled there.

With the Belgian surrealist E. L. T. Mesens, he opened the London Gallery on Cork Street, where he promoted the Surrealists as well as the sculptor Henry Moore, to whom he was first introduced by his close friend Wolfgang Paalen, as well as the painter Ben Nicholson, and the sculptors Barbara Hepworth and Naum Gabo.

1937

Penrose came to Cornwall in June 1937, staying in his brother's home at Lambe Creek on the Truro River.

He was accompanied by a group of surrealist artists; his new lover Leonora Carrington, Max Ernst, Eileen Agar, Lee Miller, Man Ray, Edouard Mesens, Paul Eluard, and Joseph Bard.

Photographs of their stay can be seen at Falmouth Art Gallery.

1938

Busy with other duties, he made a small number of paintings such as the 1938 Le Grand Jour, which he described as "a collage painting although nothing but paint has been applied to the canvas. The images are unrelated to each other but by coming together like images in dreams they produce new associations which can be interpreted in whatever way the spectator may feel inclined."

The image, he wrote "seemed to indicate an atmosphere of excitement and exhilaration centred round the distillation of a dance hall and a sunset in an alembic".

Penrose commissioned a sculpture from Moore for his Hampstead house; the work became the focus of a press campaign against abstract art.

In 1938, Penrose organised a tour of Picasso's Guernica that raised funds for the Republican Government in Spain.

In the same year he had an affair with Peggy Guggenheim, when she met him at her gallery Guggenheim Jeune to try and sell him a painting by French Surrealist artist Yves Tanguy.

Penrose told Guggenheim he loved an American woman in Egypt, and in her autobiography Guggenheim reports that she told him to "go to Egypt to get his ladylove".

1939

By 1939, Penrose had begun a relationship with the model and photographer Lee Miller.

1941

In 1941 Penrose wrote the Home Guard Manual of Camouflage, which provided accurate guidance on the use of texture, not only colour, especially for protection from aerial photography, which was monochrome at that time.

Penrose applied for a job at the Foreign Office, but was turned down because of a perceived security risk, possibly relating to the investigation of Lee Miller by MI5.

1945

He also had an affair with the art conservator and botanist Gigi Crompton between 1945 and 1947.

1947

Penrose finally married Miller in 1947.

They lived at 21 Downshire Hill, Hampstead, London, which now bears a blue plaque.

As a Quaker, Penrose had been a pacifist, but after the outbreak of the Second World War he volunteered as an air raid warden and then taught military camouflage at the Home Guard training centre at Osterley Park.

This led to Penrose's commission as a captain in the Royal Engineers.

He worked as senior lecturer at the Eastern Command Camouflage School in Norwich, and at the Camouflage Development and Training Centre at Farnham Castle, Surrey.

During his lectures, he used to startle his audiences by inserting a colour photograph of his partner Lee Miller, lying on a lawn naked but for a camouflage net; when challenged, he argued that "if camouflage can hide Lee's charms, it can hide anything".

Forbes suggests this was a surrealist technique being put into service.

His lectures were respected by both trainees and colleagues.

After the war, Penrose co-founded the Institute of Contemporary Arts (ICA) in London in 1947.

He organised the first two ICA exhibitions: 40 Years of Modern Art, which included many key works of Cubism, and 40,000 Years of Modern Art, which reflected his interest in African sculpture.

Penrose was a presence at the ICA for 30 years; he produced books on the works of his friends Pablo Picasso, Max Ernst, Joan Miró, Man Ray and Antoni Tàpies.

1949

Penrose and Miller bought Farley Farm House near Chiddingly, East Sussex, in 1949, where he displayed his valuable collection of modern art, and in particular the Surrealists and works by Picasso.

1960

He was also a trustee of the Tate Gallery; he organised a survey of Picasso's work there in 1960 and used his contacts to negotiate purchases of works by Picasso and the Surrealists at discounted prices.