Anthony Green RA
Biography
Born in Luton
1956-60
Studied at The Slade School of Fine Art
1960-61
French Government Scholarship to Paris
1963
Gulbenkian Purchase Award
1967-69
Harkness Fellowship to USA
1971
Elected to Royal Academy
1977
Royal Academy Summer Exhibition, Exhibit of the Year
Elected Fellow of University College, London
1996
Short listed for Jerwood Painting Prize
2000-2008
Appointed a Trustee of the Royal Academy of Arts
2002
Elected to the New English Art Club
2003
Featured Artist at the Royal Academy Summer Exhibition
2008
Shortlisted for Threadneedle Figurative Art Prize
2008-2012
Chairman of Exhibitions Committee, Royal Academy
Solo Exhibitions
Since 1962, Anthony Green has held over 100 one-man shows in many cities worldwide, including London, Glasgow, Tokyo,
New York, Rotterdam, Chicago, Berlin, Hamburg, Hanover, Brussels and Sydney.
In addition, between July 1999 and January 2000 he toured to 15 UK cathedrals and to Dublin with ‘Resurrection – a pictorial sculpture for the Millennium’
one man exhibitions at The Richmond Hill Gallery
2006 Earthly Delights, 1972 - 2006
2008 Paintings 1958 – 2008
2010 Flowers, Clouds, Corsets and a Cactus
Public Collections
Arts Council of Great Britain
Baltimore Museum of Art, USA
Boston Museum of Fine Art, USA
British Council
Chantrey Bequest, Tate Gallery
City of Hiroshima, Japan
City of Southampton Art Gallery
Cleveland Art Gallery, Middlesborough
Contemporary Art Society, London
Council for National Academic Awards
Frans Halsmuseum, Haarlem, Holland
Fukuoka City Art Museum, Japan
Gallery of Modern Art, Glasgow
Government Art Collection
Gulbenkian Foundation, Lisbon, Portugal
Hugh Lane Gallery of Modern Art, Dublin, Eire
Ikeda Museum of 20 th Century Art, Japan
Iwaki City Art Museum, Japan
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA
Museum Boymans van Beuningen, Rotterdam, Netherlands
National Museum of Wales, Cardiff
National Portrait Gallery, London
Niigata City Art Museum, Japan
Olinda Museum, Brazil
Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts, University of East Anglia, Norwich
Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art (The Gabrielle Keiller Collection)
Setagaya Art Museum, Japan
Tate Gallery
Tochigi Prefectural Museum of Fine Arts, Japan
Tokyo Metropolitan Arts Museum, Japan
Ulster Museum, Belfast
Victoria and Albert Museum, London
In 2017, the artist Anthony Green had a show at the Royal Academy in London called The Life and Death of Miss Dupont. This included The Fur Coat: Hazana, a life-sized portrait of the Frenchwoman in mink; a cut-out painting of the same, dressed as a young bride and flying ceilingwards on a wire; others of her, middle-aged and naked, lying on a pink satin eiderdown; studio photographs of Miss Dupont;and pieces of official paperwork recording her birth, marriage and death.
In the middle of the gallery was a cut-glass powder bowl from her bedroom. This contained its late owner’s ashes. “The show is a son’s tribute to his mum,” said Green, whose mother had been born Marie Madeleine Dupont. “At last, she’s in the Royal Academy.”
This frank celebration of intimacy was often compared with Stanley Spencer’s at Cookham, although works such as The Chinese Lantern (1974) were less analytical than Spencer’s. Green’s revelations might have seemed at first glance happily cartoonish, but they were also unsettling: figures spreadeagled on beds, painted from vertiginous angles that felt voyeuristic. Whether his eye for petit-bourgeois bad taste was affectionate or mocking was difficult to say.
This yearning for a domestic bliss that inevitably ended as tinged with darkness carried echoes of Green’s childhood. His father, Frederick, was, in his son’s telling, an ugly drunk. After 18 years of unhappy marriage, Madeleine left him in 1951, and their 12-year-old son was sent as a boarder to Highgate school in north London. “My world was destroyed,”
Green recalled ncaged to paint by the school’s art teacher, the Welsh landscapist Kyffin Williams, Green went to the Slade from 1956 to 1960, winning the Tonks drawing prize and a French government bursary to study in Paris. His early paintings show the influence of his time there, and an exposure to the expressionism of Chaïm Soutine.
Mr Green Looking at his Wife, shown in the RA’s 2017 Summer Exhibition, is triangular; Montbretia, The Reflection (2009) is square, but with its right-hand edge cut into the shape of Green’s own profile. The self-portrait J’admire Beaucoup Marcel, Mais Reflexion Faite, Je Préfère Ma Femme (1991-2016) shows the artist sitting in a room whose shattered shape makes it seem as though it has exploded. The canvas of Trimming, October (1994), of Green and his wife pruning their garden, had been cut into a two-dimensional topiary. “I let the subject dictate the shape,” Green said.
Many of these departures seemed like gimmicks, but they had art history on their side. The exploded room of J’admire Beaucoup Marcel played games with cubism, fragmenting the frame rather than the picture plane. The green carpeted swirls of My Mother Alone in Her Dining Room (1975-76) made a distant nod to Matisse, the profiled edge of Montbretia to the surrealism of Magritte. Critics, though, tended to be unimpressed.
If Green had legion admirers at the RA Summer Exhibition, and in countries such as Japan, the contemporary art establishment could be savage in its dismissal of what it saw as a facetious conservatism in his work. This was not helped by his own description of it as being “rather like a strip cartoon of people’s lives”, and a friendship with the artist Beryl Cook.
A tutor at the RA Schools recalled citing Green as an influence at his interview at the Chelsea School of Art in the 1990s. The result was a horrified silence, broken by one member of the panel, kinder than the rest, saying, “I suppose you can have him as a guilty pleasure, but who do you really like?” Suggestions that a show of Green’s work transfer from Tokyo to London were met, the artist remembered, with a frosty refusal.
The culmination of his eccentric practice was a vast millennium project, called Resurrection, which toured the cathedrals of England in 2000. Three metres high by six long and three years in the making, Green dubbed this “a pictorial sculpture”. It was part Balzacian human comedy, part personal psychodrama. Where Spencer’s treatment of the resurrection had had the people of Cookham raised incorruptible, Green’s saw the extended Green and Dupont families wafted to paradise.
Critics inevitably compared the work with Spencer’s The Resurrection, Cookham, but its maker saw different antecedents. “It really comes from Sassetta, Van Eyck and Giotto,” Green told the Sunday Times in 1999. “Particularly Giotto. I see myself as belonging to the great tradition of painting, and that is the moment when people reach for their cutlasses and say, ‘Cut the bastard down, he’s too big for his boots.’”
He was the Royal Academician par excellence, clubbable, garrulous and kind to students and visitors. Elected RA in 1977, he was made a trustee of the Academy in 2000, having narrowly missed out on election to its presidency.
Mary died in 2020. Green is survived by their daughters, Kate and Lucy.