Robert Colquhoun (1914 – 1962) was
a Scottish painter, printmaker and theatre set designer.
Colquhoun was born in Kilmarnock and was educated at
Kilmarnock Academy. He won a scholarship to study at the Glasgow School of Art,
where he met Robert MacBryde with whom he established a lifelong gay
relationship[1] and professional collaboration, the pair becoming known as
"the two Roberts". He joined MacBryde on a travelling scholarship to
France and Italy from 1937 to 1939, before serving as an ambulance driver in
the Royal Army Medical Corps during the Second World War. After being injured,
he returned to London in 1941 where he shared studio space with MacBryde. The
pair shared a house with John Minton and, from 1943, Jankel Adler.
Colquhoun's early works of agricultural labourers and
workmen were strongly influenced by the colours and light of rural Ayrshire.
His work developed into a more austere, Expressionist style, heavily influenced
by Picasso, and concentrated on the theme of the isolated, agonised figure.
From the mid-1940s to the early 1950s he was considered one of the leading
artists of his generation.
Colquhoun died, an alcoholic, in relative obscurity in
London in 1962.
Amazing artists. Amazing Bohemians. Amazing gay men who lived their relationship in the open in times when being gay was both illegal and viciously persecuted. I'm glad a beret was involved.
ReplyDelete