Harold Gilman (1876 - 1919). Harold John Wilde Gilman was a British painter of interiors, portraits and landscapes, and a founder-member of the Camden Town Group. Though born in Rode, Somerset, Gilman spent his early years at Snargate Rectory, in the Romney Marshes in Kent, where his father was the Rector. He was educated in Kent, Abingdon School in Berkshire, from 1885 to 1890, in Rochester and at Tonbridge School, and for one year at Brasenose College in Oxford University. Although he developed an interest in art during a childhood convalescence period, Gilman did not begin his artistic training until after his non-collegiate year at Oxford University and after working in the Ukraine as a tutor to a British family in Odessa. In 1896 he entered the Hastings School of Art to study painting, but in 1897 transferred to the Slade School of Fine Art in London, where he remained from 1897 to 1901, and where he met Spencer Gore. In 1904 he went to Spain and spent over a year studying Spanish masters. Velázquez and Goya as well as Whistler were major early influences. At this time he met and married the American painter Grace Cornelia Canedy. The couple settled in London. They had two daughters and one son David born on 20 September 1908, at Letchworth Garden City in Hertfordshire. The family address at this time was 15 Westholm Green, Letchworth. Harold Gilman was married, for the second time, in the late summer of 1917 to Sylvia Hardy, an artist he had met at Westminster and who had studied with him since 1914. Meeting Walter Sickert in 1907, Gilman became a founder member of both the Fitzroy Street Group and the Camden Town Group. In the meantime he joined the Allied Artists' Association, moved to Letchworth, and began to show influence from work of Vuillard as well as Sickert. In 1910 he was stimulated by the first post-Impressionist exhibition at the Grafton Galleries, and visited Paris with Ginner. He soon outpaced Sickert's understanding of post-Impressionism and moved out from under his shadow, using ever stronger colour, under the influence of Van Gogh, Gauguin and Signac. In 1913 he exhibited jointly with Gore, and became the first president of the London Group, and identified with Charles Ginner as a Neo-Realist, exhibiting with Ginner under that label in 1914. Gilman visited Scandinavia in 1912 and 1913, and may have travelled with the artist William Ratcliffe, who had relations there. Gilman made studies of the environment, and painted Canal Bridge, Flekkefjord, an accurate depiction, whose subject is likely to have been inspired by Van Gogh's depiction of a similar bridge in Provence. Gilman had rejected Van Gogh's work when he first encountered it, but later became a strong admirer. According to Wyndham Lewis, he kept postcards of Van Gogh's work on his wall and sometimes hung one of his own works next to them, if he was especially satisfied with it. In 1914 he joined Robert Bevan's short-lived Cumberland Market Group, with Charles Ginner and John Nash. In 1915 the group held their only exhibition. He taught at the Westminster School of Art where he influenced students who included Mary Godwin, Ruth Doggett, and Marjorie Sherlock. He then started his own school with Ginner. In 1918 he was commissioned to travel to Nova Scotia by the Canadian War Records; and painted a picture of Halifax Harbour for the War Memorial at Ottawa. He died in London on 12 February 1919, of the Spanish flu. Exhibitions were devoted to him at the Tate in 1954 and 1981, and he also featured in its 2007-2008 Camden Town Group retrospective at Tate Britain.
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