Claude Bendall was born in Boscastle on the North
Cornish Coast in 1891. His father was a schoolmaster and a concert
pianist and Bendall grew up to be both a gifted painter and pianist.
He studied piano under the Polish composer and pianist, Ignacy
Jan Paderewski, who had swept the world with his playing as well
as his personality. Paderewsky declared that Bendall
had a prodigious musical talent and his father gave him the opportunity
of becoming a concert pianist or an artist. Having decided on
an artistic career, his father sent him
off to study at the Sorbonne in Paris for two years
(1908-10).
Bendall exhibited in
Paris and, on his return, started illustrating high-class magasines
as well as becoming an art editor for a short time. He served
in the British Army for four years during the First World War
but, after the war, found it difficult to make a living as many
of the magasines, by whom he had previously been commissioned,
had ceased publishing.
Although he had exhibited at the Walker Art Gallery, Liverpool, between
1920-25 and elsewhere, Bendall decided that he wished to develop
his artistic style and technique to reflect the influences of French
Impressionism.
When he was approaching the age of 40, he met his future wife,
Barbara. She became his source of inspiration as a model, a tireless
helper in his studio and protected him from daily concerns, even
to the extent of taking in paying guests and contributing articles
to journals and magasines in order to maintain their income,
whilst encouraging Bendall to concentrate on developing his new
artistic technique.
Her generosity was rewarded when, after several months' intense
work, Bendall announced to her, "I think I've
done it". He submitted the work to the Royal
Academy in 1943, it was accepted and, to his and their pleasure,
it was hung 'on the line', the best position in the exhibition. He
was even more pleased when he went to the private viewing and
discovered that the painting had already been sold.
Bendall's unique method of painting involved the use
of a small metal file to lay the paint onto the paper. This allowed
him to create a particularly detailed, highly worked and intricately
coloured picture surface, as is self-evident in this painting.
Over the next 16 years (1943-59) he exhibited over 30 works
at the Royal Academy. In 1946 he submitted three paintings
to the RA, all of which were accepted, and a week later
the RA's President, Sir Alfred Munnings, notified Bendall
that the RA Committee had
recommended that his painting, Reminiscence, a portrait
of his wife Barbara, was to be purchased for the nation under
the Edward Scott Bequest.
Bendall lived and worked in a converted oasthouse, called Nepicar,
near Wrotham in Kent. He travelled to France and Ireland where
he liked to paint the colourful life of gypsies. He received
many portrait commissions and held many exhibitions during his
life but became ill and was unable to paint after 1965. He died
five years later, in 1970.
Please feel free to forward this email to anyone you
think might be interested.
With best wishes

CHRIS NOEL-JOHNSON
ALBANY FINE ART
T: +44 (0) 1367 870961
M: +44 (0) 7799 691 692
E: chrisnj@albanyfineart.co.uk |