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L. S. Lowry
Lawrence Stephen Lowry (November 1, 1887 - February 23, 1976)
was an English artist born in Barratt Street, Old Trafford, Manchester.
Most of his pictures depict Salford, where he lived and worked for
over thirty years.
Lowry is famous for painting scenes of life in the industrial districts
of northern England during the early 20th century. He had a distinctive
style of painting and is best known for urban landscapes peopled
with many human figures ('matchstick men'). He tended to paint these
in drab colours. He also painted mysterious unpeopled landscapes,
brooding portraits, and the secret 'marionette' works (the latter
only found after his death).
He is widely misperceived as an amateur and naïve 'Sunday
painter'.
Biography
Lowry was born the only child of Robert Stephen, an Irish-born
estate agent, and Elizabeth (née Hobson) a concert pianist
and piano teacher in the middle class suburb of Victoria Park in
Rusholme. His family called him 'Laurie'. It was a difficult birth
and his mother, who had been hoping for a girl, was uncomfortable
even looking at him at first. Later she expressed her envy of her
sister Mary, who had "three splendid daughters" instead
of one "clumsy boy".
After Lowry's birth his mother's health was too poor for her to
continue teaching. She is reported to have been gifted and respected.
She was an irritable, nervous woman who had been brought up to expect
high standards by her stern father. Like him she was controlling
and intolerant of failure. She used illness as a means of securing
the attention and obedience of her mild and affectionate husband
and she dominated her son in the same way.
Lowry had an unhappy childhood. At school he made few friends and
showed no academic aptitude. His father was affectionate towards
him but he could not gain the approval that he craved from his mother.
When he reached school-leaving age his vocation was not obvious
but an aunt noted that he had been good at drawing ships so in 1903
his parents enrolled him in private art lessons with Reginald Barber
although his father was completely indifferent towards the illustrative
arts. A year later, at seventeen, he started work as a clerk with
a Manchester chartered accountant. From 1905 he attended evening
classes at Manchester College of Art studying classes in freehand
drawing, light & shade, preparatory antique and, when his aptitude
became apparent, life studies under Pierre Adolphe Valette. He was
employed as a clerk for the General Accident Fire and Life Assurance
Company in 1907 and he started private art clases with the American
portratit painter William Fitz in the same year.
In 1909 his father's business failed and the family had to move
to a smaller house at 117 Station Road, Pendlebury, an industrial
suburb to the northwest of Salford. Lowry became a rent collector
for the Pall Mall Property Company in 1910. It is at this time that
he he took up painting seriously and his sketchbooks were filled
with images from the streets and homes that he visited for his day
job. In 1915 he started evening classes at Salford School of Art
under Bernard D Taylor and the stylised human form that became his
trademark began to emerge. Taylor encouraged him to use the white
backgrounds that would come to be one of his trademarks. In 1928
he stopped attending art school.
He first exhibited in 1919 with two paintings at the Annual Exhibition
the Manchester Academy of Fine Arts and showed widely throughout
the 1920s although his work was often dismissed as amateurish and
childlike. In 1921 he exhibited his work in the offices of the Manchester
architect Roland Thomasson and sold his first picture, a pastel
entitled The Lodging House. He entered paintings in the Paris Salon,
with the New English Art Club (from 1927 to 1936, in Dublin, Manchester
and Japan.
Lowry illustrated The Cotswold Book written by Harold Timperley
in 1930 and he held a solo exhibition of drawings at the Round House
gallery at Manchester University. The book was published in 1931.
In 1938 Alexander J. McNeil Reid saw several of Lowry's paintings
awaiting framing at James Bourlet & Sons Limited (now the transport
division of Sotheby's auction house). He inquired after the artist
and in 1939 the Reid & Lefevre Gallery, London held a one-man
exhibition of his paintings. That exhibition sold sixteen paintings
including one to the Tate Gallery (for just £15). It came
as a very pleasant surprise to Lowry, who said that the show gave
him more pleasure than anything else in art. The Reid & Lefevre
Gallery showed 15 solo exhibitions of his work between 1945 and
1979.
He first exhibited at the Manchester Academy of Fine Arts (MAFA)
in 1932, was elected a member in 1934 and continued to exhibit there
annually until 1972. In 1936 Salford City Art Gallery bought its
first Lowry painting from the MAFA exhibition; it was A Street Scene
painted in 1928. The city held its first one man show of his work
in 1941 and opened a permanent collection of his work in 1958. He
became a member of the Royal Society of British Artists in 1934.
He first exhibited at the Royal Academy Summer Show in 1932 and
was elected an Associate in 1955 and a full Royal Academician in
1962.
Lowry and some other members of the Manchester Arts Club formed
a sub-group called the Manchester Group, which exhibited at the
Midday Studios, Moseley Street, Manchester and elsewhere in the
city until 1956.
Retrospective exhibitions of his work include those at Salford
City Art Gallery as part of the 1951 Festival of Britain, Manchester
City Art Gallery in 1959 and at Graves Art Gallery, Sheffield in
1962. In 1965 the Arts Council curated a touring retrospective exhibition
that ended at the Tate Gallery in 1967 and the Royal Academy, London
held a posthumous tribute in 1976.
His father died in 1932 leaving debts and his mother, who had been
subject to neurosis and depression, became bed ridden. Lowry's mother
had always been a very important figure in his life and now he had
to care for her. He painted from 10 pm to 2 am after his mother
had fallen asleep. He frequently expressed regret that he received
little recognition as an artist until the year that his mother died
and that she had never been able to enjoy his success. From the
mid 1930s until at least 1939 Lowry took annual holidays at Berwick-upon-Tweed.
With the outbreak of war Lowry served as a volunteer fire watcher
in Manchester and accepted an invitation to become a war artist.
In 1953 he was appointed Official Artist at the coronation of Elizabeth
II of the United Kingdom.
With the death of his mother in October 1939 Lowry became depressed
and neglected the upkeep of his house to such a degree that the
landlord repossessed it in 1948. He was not short of money and bought
The Elms in Mottram-in-Longdendale, Cheshire. Although he considered
the house ugly and uncomfortable he stayed there until his death
almost thirty years later. In his new home he employed a housekeeper,
Mrs Swindells, who ensured that he and his home were adequately
maintained. She would cook his breakfast and leave a supper for
him.
Lowry retired from the Pall Mall Property Company in 1952. During
his career he had risen to become chief cashier but he never stopped
collecting rents. The firm had supported his development as an artist
and he was allowed him time off for exhibitions in addition to his
normal holiday allowance. It seems, however, that he was not proud
of his job; his secrecy about his employment by the Pall Mall Property
Company is widely seen as a desire to present himself as a serious
artist but the secrecy extended beyond the art world into his social
circle.
Margery Thompson first met him when she was a schoolgirl and he
became part of her family circle. He attended concerts with her
family and friends, visited her home and entertained her at his
Pendlebury home where he shared his knowledge of painting. They
remained friends until his death but he never told her that he had
any work except his art.
In the 1950s he regularly visited friends at Cleator Moor, Cumbria
(where Geoffrey Bennett was Manager at National Westminster Bank
and Southampton (where Margery Thompson had moved upon her marriage).
Lowry painted pictures of the bank in Cleator Moor, Southampton
Floating Bridge and other scenes local to his friends' homes.
He befriended the 23-year-old Cumbrian artist Sheila Fell in November
1955 and supported her career by buying several pictures that he
gave to museums. In 1957 an unrelated thirteen-year-old schoolgirl
called Carol Ann Lowry wrote to Lowry at her mother's urging to
ask his advice on becoming an artist. He visited her home in Heywood,
Greater Manchester some months later and became a family friend.
He was awarded an honorary Master of Arts from the University of
Manchester in 1945, and Doctor of Letters in 1961, and given freedom
of the City of Salford in 1965. In 1975 he was awarded an honorary
Doctor of Letters by the University of Salford and the same degree
by the University of Liverpool. The art world celebrated his 77th
birthday (in 1964) with an exhibition of his work and that of 25
contemporary artists who had submitted tributes to Monk's Hall Museum,
Eccles. The Hallé Orchestra also performed a concert in his
honour and Harold Wilson used Lowry's painting The Pond as his official
christmas card. Lowry's painting Coming out of school was the stamp
of highest denomination in a series issued by the Post Office depicting
great British artists in 1967.
He died of pneumonia at The Woods hospital in Glossop on 23 February
1976 aged 88. He was buried in Chorlton Southern Cemetery, Manchester
next to his parents. He left his estate to Carol Ann Lowry.
Lowry never married although he had several young female friends.
He claimed never to have "had a girl [friend]". He said
that he lived for his mother and that all he wanted was her smile
or a word of praise from her. His father was indifferent to his
artistic activity and although Lowry believed that his mother did
not understand his painting, "she understood me and that was
enough". Elizabeth Lowry never did appreciate her son, however.
He may have had high-functioning Asperger's Syndrome but this remains
a contentious diagnosis that is not shared by those that knew him
personally.
He was a secretive and mischievous man who enjoyed stories irrespective
of their truth. His friends have observed that his anecdotes were
more notable for their humour than their accuracy and in many cases
he set out deliberately to deceive. His stories of the fictional
Ann were inconsistent and he invented other people as frameworks
upon which to hand his tales. The collection of clocks in his living
room were all set at different times: to some people he said that
this was because he didn't want to know the real time; to others
he claimed that it was to save him from being deafened by their
simultaneous chimes.
The contradictions in his live are exacerbated by this confusion.
He is widely seen as a shy man but he had many long-lasting friendships
and made new friends throughout his adult life. He was contrary
and could be selfish but he was generous and concerned for the well-being
of his friends and of strangers. It may be as Sheila Fell has said:
"He was a great humanist. To be a humanist one has first to
love human beings, and to be a great humanist one has to be slightly
detached from them."
In later life he grew tired of being approached by strangers on
account of his celebrity and he particularly disliked being visited
at home in this way. Another of his unverifiable stories had him
keeping a suitcase by the front door so that he could claim to be
just leaving; a practice he claimed to have abandoned after a helpful
young man insisted on taking him to the station and had to be sent
off to buy a paper so that Lowry could buy a ticket for just one
stop without revealing his deceit.
The paintings are the excellent portrayal of the events and scenes
that we see around us. The painters are the best cameras of the
world. They reproduce many different types of pictures. They even
draw imaginary pictures that do not exist in this world. We tend
to use both thinned oil paints and dense oil paints. Masterpieces
can be dyed more than once, but each time it may be different from
the existing paintings.h
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