Anthony Gross
Gross in 1924
Gross in 1924
 
Gross by Alfred E Orr, 1926
Gross by Alfred E Orr, 1926
 
Tony and Daisy Gross in Paris, March 1930
Tony and Daisy Gross in Paris, March 1930
 
Gross Family in Flamstead 1940
Gross Family in Flamstead 1940
 
In The Egyptian Desert, 1942
In The Egyptian Desert, 1942
 
London, 1947
London, 1947
 
At Le Boulvé, 1960
At Le Boulvé, 1960
 
River Lot, France 1973
River Lot, France 1973
 
At Le Boulvé, 1982 (Copyright Brenda Herdman)
At Le Boulvé, 1982 (Copyright Brenda Herdman)
 
At Le Boulvé, 1984 (Copyright Brenda Herdman)
At Le Boulvé, 1984 (Copyright Brenda Herdman)
 
In the Lot, 1984 (Copyright Brenda Herdman)
In the Lot, 1984 (Copyright Brenda Herdman)
 
With press at Le Boulvé, 1984 (Copyright Brenda Herdman)
With press at Le Boulvé, 1984 (Copyright Brenda Herdman)
 

Biography
1905 Born 19th March in Dulwich, South London. Elder child and only son of Alexander Gross (1880-1958), a Hungarian-born map publisher of Jewish descent, and Isabelle Crowley (1886-1938), his part Irish, part Anglo-Italian Catholic wife, a playwright and suffragette
1906 Birth of his sister Phyllis, later the artist, writer and founder of the Geographers' A-Z Map, Phyllis Pearsall
1909-14 Annual visits to Budapest and Curug, his father's birthplace, and to Ujvidék (now Novi Sad)
1913 Mother's feminist play Break the Walls Down performed at the Savoy Theatre. Family moved to The Firs, Claygate, Surrey. At his father's premises in Fleet Street, made his first drawings on stone with litho ink
1919-1922 Educated at Repton School, where his headmaster was Dr Fisher, later Archbishop of Canterbury, Lord Fisher of Lambeth, who became an early patron, and his art master was ex-Slade student Arthur Norris. On a visit to the school, the painter Louis Wain was impressed by Gross's work, and this resulted in him being given more time for painting and etching. His fellow pupils included Christopher Isherwood
1920 First post-war visit to Hungary. Made the woodcut 'Barn' as a Christmas card
1921 Painted his first oil, 'View from Study Window' and made his first etching, 'Serbian Street'
1922 Left Repton in December as a result of his parents' separation and father's bankruptcy. His father emigrated to the USA, settling first in Chicago and then in New York where he resumed his activities as a map-maker. His mother's new partner in London was American society portrait-painter Alfred Everett Orr, who paid Gross's fees at the Slade in 1923 and taught him how to set out the colours on the palette from left to right in the manner of Rubens
1923 Entered the Slade School under Professor Henry Tonks, and studied there from January to June. During the summer term also attended evening classes in etching with W P Robins at the Central School of Art. In the Easter and summer holidays, visited his sister Phyllis, now a pupil-teacher at Fécamp in Normandy. They painted and sketched together in the Normandy countryside. In the Autumn, Gross moved to Paris. Studied painting under Pierre Laurens at the Académie Julian and engraving under C A Waltner at the École des Beaux-Arts.
Found lodgings in the Rue des Canettes on the Left Bank, and produced some 16 etchings, the majority from drawings made in Normandy. Among his fellow students were Patrick Millard, Richard Pearsall, André Jacquemin and Léon Lang
1924 Stayed in Paris until April. Then travelled to Madrid and enrolled at the Academia de San Fernando life class and engraving class, under Carlos Berger. Fellow students were Vicente Cobreros, José-Luiz Sanchez-Toda and Vicente Sainz. Deeply impressed by the work of Goya. Signed contract by mail with Wilfred Deighton, of Deighton & Sons, The Strand, London, accepting £9 a month plus materials in exchange for all his work. The contract was to last 6 years.
At the end of the summer, he bought a donkey and travelled slowly north to Bilbao and Bermeo on the coast. Made many drawings on the way.
Returned briefly to England, then back to Madrid for the autumn term. Etched from drawings and paintings done in the summer.
1925 Winter term at Academia de San Fernando.
In Easter holidays, travelled with Phyllis in Andalusia and Spanish Morocco (Ceuta and Tetuan) during the Rif war. Spent Summer term in Madrid and etched plates from Moroccan drawings.
In November held his first one-man show at the Abbey Gallery, Victoria Street, London (W R Deighton & Sons). Showed oil paintings, watercolours and 34 etchings of France, Morocco and England
1926-27 In Paris from October to March at the Académie Julian, also attending life classes at the Grande Chaumière, along with SW Hayter and Balthus. With Hayter, learned engraving and printing techniques from Joseph Hecht, the Polish-born engraver
1928 Winter in Belgium, painting and etching. Views of Bruges and Tournai.
Rented a small studio in Brussels. Visited Cannes to stay with his mother and sister Phyllis, recently married to Dick Pearsall.
From Brussels in the spring, 'dissatisfied with everything', returned to Paris. At the suggestion of Lefèvre-Foinet, artists' material suppliers, took the train south to Brive, in the Corrèze. Befriended journalist Jean Madelaigue. Spent the summer in Brive and nearby village of Chasteaux, then moved to Cahors and Cabrerets in the Lot. Influence of Van Gogh became very strong. Spent the autumn in Toulouse, attending classes at the École des Beaux-Arts, under Louvrier, and produced etchings of Cahors and Toulouse. His print 'La Foule' marked a turning point in his practice of etching, heralding a linear approach.
1929 Moved to Saint-Tropez and stayed with his mother at Cannes. Christopher Isherwood introduced him to musician André Mangeot and his son Sylvain. Visited Francis Picabia at Mougins.
Returned to Brive and Chasteaux in the spring, then on to the village of Bach, in the Lot, where he painted oils which he judged 'really good'.
Back in Brive in September, continued painting, then returned to Paris in October. Meanwhile the contract with Deighton had ended.
In Paris, shared a studio with Hayter in Montparnasse and sold paintings to the dealer Van Leer. Met Fernand Léger. With the world slump, the art market collapsed and paintings failed to sell
1930 Married fashion-artist Marcelle Marguerite (Daisy) Florenty (1899-1988) and moved into her studio in the Hameau Boileau, Auteuil. Painted in the shanty-town of la Zone, between the Seine and Issy-les-Moulineaux. Etchings followed oils ('La Zone' and 'Sortie d'Usine' series). Introduced to circle of Daisy's Russian émigré friends, including Ossip Zadkine, Yuri Annenkoff, Natalia Goncharova and Boris Souvarine. Influenced by Annenkoff's work and by Daisy's fashion drawings.
In the summer first visit to Daisy's home town, Villeneuve-sur-Lot, where her parents ran a shop selling artificial flowers and wreaths. Painted 'Daisy and Yette, Route de Monflanquin'.
1931 In Paris, exhibited paintings at Salon des Tuileries and Salon d'Automne. Continued 'Sortie d'Usine' series of etchings. Frequent contact with Pierre Guastalla, André Jacquemin, Léon Lang and other printmakers. Drew for Russian émigré magazine, Satiricon. Designed set and costumes for avant-garde ballet Chauve-Souris. Watercolour 'Le Vivier' and drawings of shop scenes during his second visit to Villeneuve.
1932 Completed first cartoon film Une Journée en Afrique, with Courtland (Hector) Hoppin, a wealthy American expatriate who provided the capital and his skill as a photographer. Began work on films Les Funérailles and La Joie de Vivre. Oil painting 'La Route de Sainte-Livrade (Villeneuve). Summer spent in the Spanish fishing village of Cambrils, Tarragona, the scene of several notable paintings and etchings
1933 Hungarian composer Tibor Harsanyi commissioned to compose score for La Joie de Vivre. Gross prepared another cartoon film, The Storm, in colour, set in Cambrils. Painted in gouache and watercolour. Etching 'La Route de Sainte-Livrade'. Elected member of La Jeune Gravure Contemporaine, the society of printmakers founded in Paris in 1929.
Exhibited regularly with the Society for the rest of his life, and many members, such as Étienne Cournault, Pierre Guastalla and Yves Alix, became close friends
1934 La Joie de Vivre showed to much acclaim in Paris, London and New York. Gross and Hoppin moved to London and accepted a contract with Alexander Korda. Rented house in Godfrey Street, Chelsea. Painted with casein on board. Etched 'Kites in Battersea Park'. First show at the Leicester Galleries. Boat trip to Santander and Vigo. Painted watercolour 'La Guardia a Monte Santa, Tecla', near Vigo
1935 La Joie de Vivre purchased by the Museum of Modern Art, New York. Worked on colour cartoon-film Fox Hunt for Korda's London Films. Gathered around him at Hounslow a team of copyists, including still unknown cartoonist Giles, to help with animation on celluloid.
Birth of daughter Mary. Worked on cartoon project The Nativity
1936 Completed Fox Hunt. Illustrated a limited edition of Jean Cocteau's Les Enfants Terribles, with 75 line drawings and 7 etchings, printed by Bill Hayter at his Atelier 17. Etched 'La Maison du Poète'. Appointed Art Director for London Films, but was now growing disillusioned with the film industry and decided to return to Paris
1937 Death of his mother in February in London.
In Paris, started to illustrate George Borrow's Bible in Spain, a project later abandoned. Visited Hoppin in Grindelwald to prepare scenario for a long colour cartoon-film adaptation of Jules Verne's Around the World in Eighty Days. Etched 'Canal de Bourgogne'.
Birth of son Jean-Pierre (Pete)
1938 Harsanyi agreed to compose score for Around the World. Large exhibition of La Jeune Gravure at the Faubourg Saint-Honoré, Paris. Around the World gouaches shown at City of Paris Petit Palais Exhibition. Further paintings and etchings of Villeneuve.
1939 Work on Around the World interrupted by war. In September, after leaving his family in Villeneuve, Gross hastened back to London and worked on a new film project, The Ballad of Barrage Balloons. Watercolours of London preparing for war
1940 Further work commissioned by the War Artists' Advisory Committee, chaired by Sir Kenneth Clark. In early May, Gross returned briefly to Villeneuve, and despite the invasion of France by the Germans, managed to bring his family out in July by one of the last ships to depart from Bordeaux, Glasgow-bound. In London, resumed his sketches for the War Office. Took part in a joint war artists' exhibition at the National Gallery.
Moved his family to Flamstead, Herts, for the duration of the war
1941 A roving commission took him to Caterham in Surrey, Catterick in Yorkshire, Dover and Shoeburyness. 98 works completed in 1940-41.
Appointed Official War Artist with the rank of Army Captain. Embarked on troopship Highland Monarch at Avonmouth, bound for the Middle East via the Cape
1942 Painted 'Convoy' series aboard the ship from the North Atlantic to Suez, Sierra Leone, the Cape, the Indian Ocean and Aden.
Made his base in Cairo, then joined the Ninth Army, Arab Legion and British Druze Regiment in Lebanon and Syria. Visited Mesopotamia, Kurdistan and Persia. Fascinated by Isfahan. Returned to Cairo and witnessed the Eighth Army desert campaign prior to Al Alamein and painted 'Battle of Egypt' series. Befriended fellow war-artists Edward Ardizzone and Edward Bawden. Second visit to Persia
1943 Posted to India and Burma. Visited the Arakan to record the naval campaign in the Bay of Bengal. Journeyed up the Mayu river by sampan. Thence into Nagaland and the Chin Hills on a 450-mile trek to cover the so-called 'Forgotten Army' fighting the Japanese. Returned to Chittagong and then Calcutta, where he completed his 'Battle of Arakan' and 'Chins at War' series. Posted to Tunis to cover the Fourth Indian Division in North Africa.
Returned home by air via Cairo, Algiers and Fez.
One-man show at the National Gallery, 'India in Action', which then toured Australia and North America.
1944 Posted to 50th Northumbrian Division and 1st US Infantry Division to cover preparations for the Allied Invasion of France.
On D-Day (6th June), waded ashore at Arromanches, 'holding aloft his water-colour paper and paints'. Sketched liberation of Bayeux and city of Caen in ruins. Painted 'Liberation and Battle of France' series in Brittany and Normandy, including portraits of C-in-C General Montgomery and French Resistance fighters. Present at the liberation of Paris with General de Gaulle. Personally 'liberated' Parisian suburb of Fontenay-aux-Roses. In the winter, painted 'Gateways into Germany' series (Brussels, Maastricht, Venray).
1945 Toured Eastern and Southern France, then moved into Germany for the 'Final Stages of the German War'. Present on 26 April at the meeting of the US and Russian troops at Torgau on the Elbe.
In all, as a War Artist, Gross estimated having painted some 500 pictures.
Moved to Old Church Street, Chelsea, his home for the next thirteen years
1946 Exhibited war paintings at the Tate Gallery and Jeu de Paume in Paris. Etched scenes from his travels. Painted watercolours of the English seaside and London after the war. Spent Easter at Villeneuve. Commissioned by Paul Elek to illustrate Emily Brontë's Wuthering Heights
1947 Began illustrating Hans Christian Anderson's Fairy Tales, but project later abandoned. Watercolours executed on and around Eelbrook Common, Fulham, and in the City. Revisited the Lot and Lot-et-Garonne, staying with friends Madelaigue at Montgesty, near Cahors, and Lagasserie at Jarlan, near Villeneuve.
Made the first of three large colour lithographs for J Lyons & Co, 'Herne Bay Pier'. Wuthering Heights published with 19 illustrations (Camden Classics)
1948 Visited the industrial North, sketching colliery and foundry scenes at Stanley, Co Durham, Newcastle and Corby, for Future magazine.
Summer in Normandy at the Madelaigue's cottage in Francheville, on the river Iton,where he sketched the waterside vegetation and worked with casein on board.
Began teaching life drawing at the Central School (until 1954).
Elected member of the London Group, with whom he exhibited regularly until 1971. Commissioned by John Lewis to illustrate John Galsworthy's The Forsyte Saga
1949 First summer spent in the small village of Saint-Matré in the Lot, the setting of many paintings in subsequent years. The Saint-Matré sketches led oil paintings of rocks, stones and juniper, executed in his Chelsea studio. Exhibited at the Petit Palais International Print Show, Paris.
Second J Lyons colour lithograph, 'Cricket Match'.
Illustrated Old Christmases (W Stode)
1950 Gross's friend Hayter returned from the USA. They spent the summer together at Saint-Matré. More rock and heathland paintings executed in situ. First illustrated edition of John Galsworthy's The Forsyte Saga published in Heinemann, with 12 colour lithographs and 72 line drawings and vignettes.
1951 Public showing of unfinished cartoon film Around the World in Eighty Days at the ICA London. First illustration for Radio Times of 'Point of Departure' (Anouilh's Eurydice). Illustrated Special Occasions (Festival of Britain). Returned to Cambrils in Spain, where he visited Joan Miró at Montroig, his family farm in Tarragona. Many paintings of fish.
1952 Portrait of Douglas Fairbanks for Contact. Befriended sculptors Eduardo Paolozzi and William Turnbull.
Resumed work on Around the World with the British Film Institute
Exhibited etchings at the Musée d'Art Moderne, and paintings and prints at Sago Le Garrec, Paris
Summer spent at Varengeville, near Dieppe, Normandy. Painted 'Queen Anne's Lace' series of watercolours. Met Georges Braque
1953 Six-month visit to USA. Alistair Cook introduced Gross to the Fleming family, with whom he stayed on their plantation at Lafitte, Louisiana. Painted 'Spanish Moss' and New Orleans 'Black Quarter' series.
Held one-man show in New York. Made Coronation lithograph 'Hampstead Heath'
Returned to Saint-Matré for more painting
1954 Awarded prize at 3rd International Print Fair of Lugano for 'La Maison du Poète'. Sketched London crowd scenes at King's Cross, St Pancras and Stratford East, and painted more farming scenes with figures at Saint-Matré ('Return from the Fields').
One-man show of Gross's war paintings at the Imperial War Museum, London
Illustrated first William Golding book jacket, Lord of the Flies (Faber). Third J Lyons lithograph, 'Louisiana Landscape'.
Started teaching printmaking at the Slade School, under Sir William Coldstream. Befriended Slade colleagues Lynton Lamb and F E McWilliam
1955 Louvre Print Room commissioned plate 'Fête votive à Ferrières'.
Illustrated Germinie (Germinie Lacerteux) by Jules & Edmond de Goncourt, with 8 drawings (Weidenfeld & Nicholson)
Awarded prize at International Exhibition of Engraving at Llubljana
Completed an abridged version of animated film Around the World, narrated by Donald Pleasance, for copyright reasons under a new title, An Indian Fantasy. Bought house in Le Boulvé (Lot), henceforth his spring and summer residence. Painted his first 'Yellow Valley' landscape.
1956 An Indian Fantasy shown at the National Film Theatre. The 'Le Boulvé Suite' of large etchings, printed by C H Welch and exhibited at Robert Erskine's St George's Gallery, London, proved a landmark in Gross's art. Most of his paintings and etchings after this date had as their subjects the people, landscape and vegetation of le Boulvé and its district
1957 Showing of film Artist's Proof, produced by Robert Erskine, directed by J Gibbon, featuring Gross, Jarvis, Grant, Evans, Harrison & Coplans
More 'Yellow Valleys' painted.
Philadelphia Museum of Art prize for Gross's etching 'The Valley' (No 1)
1958 Death of his father in March, aboard the Queen Elizabeth, bound for Southampton
1959 Exhibition 'The Graven Image' organised at the Whitechapel Gallery by Bryan Robertson and Robert Erskine, celebrating the revival of British printmaking, including Gross's 'Le Boulvé Suite'
Painted large upright linear landscapes at Bellaye, near Le Boulvé
Left Chelsea for smaller premises in Blackheath
1960 John Read's BBC TV film Anthony Gross, The Artist Speaks shot at Le Boulvé and the Slade School, London.
Painted tree and forest scenes, including 'Blue Forest Light'.
Commenced 'Charivari Suite' of large etchings
Illustrated Henry James's English Hours, with 29 drawings (Heinemann)
1961 Completed 'Charivari Suite'. Watercolours in Kentish orchards.
Victoria and Albert Museum commissioned three demonstration plates, 'Trees', for permanent display in the Museum
1962 Painted surrealist landscapes with imaginary figures, followed by similar etchings
1963 Oil painting 'Landscape with Pumpkins' shown at the London Group
Painted 'aerial' views of London. Etched 'Dryads'
Colour lithograph 'Bottom and the Fairies'
Joined Engraving Faculty, British School at Rome
1964 Paintings of vineyards in France
1965 Elected first President of the Printmakers' Council
'Aquitaine' oil paintings and experiments with 'Shadows' and 'Water-Boatmen'
1965-66 Visiting Professor at Minneapolis School of Art, Minnesota, USA
Etched 'Shadows', 'Sea-Shore' and 'Over the Ocean'
1967 Painted 'Blue Reflections' and pursued investigations into shadows and ripples. Moved from Blackheath to small house and printshop near Greenwich Park, which he equipped with the press formerly belonging to the intaglio printer, C H Welch
1968 Retrospective Exhibition 'The Graphic Work of Anthony Gross, 1921-1968' at the Victoria and Albert Museum, with 226 prints on show
Contributed 15 drawings to the Book of Genesis in The Oxford Illustrated Old Testament, Vol I 'The Pentateuch'.
1969 Exhibition of Gross's paintings and prints and showing of his films to mark the opening of the Greenwich Theatre.
Befriended the poet C Day Lewis
1970 Published Etching, Engraving and Intaglio Printing, 'a printmaker's handbook' (Oxford University Press)
1971 Publication of Sixe Idyllia of Theocritus, presented by Douglas Cleverdon, a limited edition with 8 etched plates by Anthony Gross, printed by Dorothea Wright at Studio Prints
Retired from Slade School.
Invited to Rome as guest of the British School
Etched new versions of 'Reflections'. John Read made a BBC TV film on Gross the etcher, A Printmaker's Workshop
1972 Painted more vineyard scenes and his first 'Backwater, River Lot'
Omnibus TV programme, Artists in Wartime, devoted inter alia, to Gross
Began teaching his daughter Mary the craft of intaglio printing
1973 Gross elected President of Film Jury at Ninth International JICA Animated Film Festival at Annecy, France, for his work as an innovator in cartoon films
Vineyard scenes painted at Vire, Lot
1974 Returned to paint near Saint-Matré
Began engraving with burin out-of-doors
1976 Retrospective Exhibition 'Five Decades of Personal Vision, 1929-1976' at the New Art Centre, London
Painted more realistic oil landscapes in the manner of his watercolours
Henceforth, abandoned etching for burin engraving
1978 Painted first version of 'Les Causses'
Commenced large engraving of 'Sérignac'
Commenced illustrating The Very Rich Hours of Le Boulvé
1979 Elected an Associate of the Royal Academy
Elected Honorary Member of the Royal Society of Painter-Etchers and Engravers
Painted second version of 'Les Causses'
1980 Elected a Royal Academician. 'Les Causses' awarded the Charles Wollaston Prize for the most distinguished painting in the RA Summer Exhibition
Awarded Gold medal the Norwegian Print Biennale, Fredrikstad
The Very Rich Hours of Le Boulvé, written and illustrated by himself, a limited edition published by the Rampant Lions Press, with 26 etched and engraved plates printed by Mary Gross
1981 Watercolours painted in south-east London. More moorland paintings in France
1982 Appointed CBE
Painted 'Causse Landscape in Grisaille' and engraved a number of London pen and wash drawings from 1947 and 1954
1983 Continued painting at Le Boulvé despite ill health
1984 Died at Le Boulvé on 8 September
1995 Redfern Gallery, London 'Anthony Gross RA 1905-1984, An Exhibition of Prints 1928-1984'
2005 Exhibtion of early prints and paintings at The Redfern Gallery, London

Collections
United Kingdom
British Museum, London
Tate Gallery, London
Royal Academy of Arts, London
Victoria and Albert Museum, London
Imperial War Museum, London
Guildhall Library, London
British Film Institute, London
Museum of the Moving Image, London
National Maritime Museum, London
Hunterian Museum & University Art Collections, Glasgow
Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art, Edinburgh
National Museum of Wales, Cardiff
Cartwright Art Gallery & Museum, Bradford
Dover Museum
Brighton Museum and Art Gallery
Leeds City Art Gallery
Southampton Art Gallery
Salford Art Gallery & Museum
City of Birmingham Museum & Art Gallery
Whitworth Art Gallery, Manchester
Walker Art Gallery, Liverpool
Ashmolean Museum, Oxford
Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge
 
Australia
Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide
National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne
 
Austria
Graphische Sammlung Albertina, Vienna
 
Canada
National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa
 
France
Cabinet des Estampes, Bibliothèque Nationale, Paris
Chalcographie du Louvre, Paris
Musée d'Art et d'Industrie, Saint-Etienne
 
Germany
Berlin-Reinickendorfer Sammlung
Wilhelm-Lehmbruck-Museum, Duisburg
Stadtbibliothek, Essen
 
Italy
Gabinetto Nazionale delle Stampe, Rome
 
Liechtenstein
Staatsmuseum, Vaduz
 
Netherlands
Rijksprentenkabinet, Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam
 
New Zealand
Auckland City Art Gallery
 
Norway
National Gallery, Oslo
 
South Africa
South African National Gallery, Cape Town
 
Sweden
Royal Academy of Fine Arts, Stockholm
Private Collection of the Royal Family
 
Switzerland
Öffentliche Kunstsammlung, Basel
Graphische Sammlung, Zurich
 
United States
National Gallery of Art, Washington DC
Library of Congress, Washington DC
Smithsonian Institute, Washington DC
Museum of Modern Art, New York
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
The Brooklyn Museum, New York
New York Public Library
Philadelphia Museum of Art
Print Club, Philadelphia
Boston Museum of Fine Arts
The Art Institute of Chicago
University of California, Berkeley
The Minneapolis Institute of Arts
Georgia Museum of Arts, Atlanta
Museum of Art, Providence, Rhode Island
Davidson Art Center, Connecticut
Southern Illinois University


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