Grace Dixon's Window, Tory Island (Toraigh), Co. Donegal, Ireland
Derek Hill (Southampton 1916 - London 2000)
Category
Art / Oil paintings
Date
1979
Materials
Oil on panel
Measurements
220 x 200 mm
Place of origin
Tory (Toraigh) Island
Order this imageCollection
Mottisfont, Hampshire
NT 769779
Caption
Derek Hill was best known in Britain as a portrait painter, but is now more famous for the wild landscapes produced in his adopted home of Ireland. He started off studying stage design in Munich, Paris and Vienna (1933-5), and for a time worked under Karl Schwitters. By 1938 he had abandoned the idea of stage design and began to paint. He painted the portraits of a huge cast of characters, including Bernard Berenson, Lord Mountbatten, Isaiah Berlin, John Betjeman, and Noël Coward, amongst many others. Hill's landscapes, by contrast, are lonely and seldom peopled. As a director of the British School in Rome in the 1950s, Hill nourished such talent as Michael Andrews, John Bratby and Anthony Fry. His own art collection was very fine with great examples of the misty Thames landscape and early abstract paintings of his friend, Victor Pasmore.
Summary
Oil painting on panel, Grace Dixon's window, Tory Island (Toraigh), Co. Donegal, Ireland by Derek Hill (Southampton 1916 - London 2000), 1979.
Provenance
Presented by Derek Hill (1916 - 2000) through The National Art Collections Fund (Art Fund), 1996
Credit line
Mottisfont Abbey,The Derek Hill Collection (presented through the National Art-Collections Fund to the National Trust in 1996)
Makers and roles
Derek Hill (Southampton 1916 - London 2000), artist