Christopher Williams (Welsh artist)

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Christopher Williams

Self-portrait
Birth name Christopher Williams
Born January 7, 1873
Maesteg, Wales
Died July 19, 1934
London, England
Nationality Welsh
Field Painter



Christopher David Williams (18731934) was a Welsh artist.

He was born in Maesteg, Wales, and studied at the Royal College of Art.

In 1911, he received a commission from King George V to work on a commemorative painting of the Investiture of Edward, Prince of Wales at Caernarfon Castle. As well as attending the ceremony, he visited Buckingham Palace, where the Royal Family sat for him in order to complete the detail of the picture. He completed two versions of this painting.

He painted the first of three portraits of Lloyd George in the summer of 1911. Lloyd George described him as "one of the most gifted artists Wales has produced".

He painted three scenes from the Mabinogion. Branwen (1915) can be viewed at the Glynn Vivian Art Gallery, Swansea. Blodeuwedd (1930) is at the Newport Museum and Art Gallery. The third painting in the series is Ceridwen (1910).

His paintings in the collection of the National Museum Wales include the "Charge of the Welsh Division at Mametz Wood" and "The Red Dress". Amongst his pictures at the National Library of Wales is "Holidays - Village Girls at Llangrannog".

In 1973 an exhibition was organised on the centenary of his birth at the National Museum of Wales, Glynn Vivian Art Gallery and Maesteg Town Hall.

In 1994, seventeen of his works were restored and put on permanent display, six in Maesteg Town Hall, and the rest in the Borough Council Civic Offices in Bridgend.

His son Ivor Williams was also a Welsh artist. He was the brother-in-law of fellow artist Fred Appleyard


Plaque at Christopher Williams' birthplace on Commercial Street, Maesteg, Photo by Sarah Rabagliati
Plaque at Christopher Williams' birthplace on Commercial Street, Maesteg, Photo by Sarah Rabagliati

Contents

[edit] Paintings / External links

Deffroad Cymru, the Awakening of Wales (1911)
Deffroad Cymru, the Awakening of Wales (1911)

[edit] Compositions

  • Branwen The subject is from the Mabinogion. The beautiful Branwen was a sister of the King of Britain and married the King of Ireland at a time then these two countries were at war. She died in Anglesey: 'and Branwen looked towards Ireland and towards the Island of the Mighty, to see if she could descry them. "Alas", said she, "woe is me that I was ever born; two islands have been destroyed because of me!" " The painting was first exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1915. In the collection of the Glynn Vivian Art Gallery, Swansea.
  • The Welsh at Mametz Wood The Charge of the Welsh Division at Mametz Wood, 11 July 1916, part of the Somme offensive. Painted at the request of the Secretary of State for War, David Lloyd George. Christopher Williams visited the scene in November 1916 and later made studies from a soldier supplied for the purpose. In the collection of the National Museum of Wales, to whom it was presented by Sir Archibald Mitchelson, Bart. 1920.
  • Blodeuwedd This subject is from the Mabinogion. Gwydion and Math "by charms and illusions" formed a wife for Llew Llaw Gyffes: "so they took the blossoms of the oak, and the blossoms of the broom, and the blossoms of the meadowsweet, and produced from them a maiden, the fairest and most graceful that man ever saw. And they baptized her, and gave her the name Bodeuwedd". In the collection of the Newport Museum and Art Gallery (gift of the Artists wife, Mrs. Emily Williams, 1937).
  • Deffroad Cymru, the Awakening of Wales The painting shows a female nude emerging from the jaws of a sea-dragaon, a kind of Celtic Birth of Venus. Preliminary drawings of this are in the sketchbook that Christopher Williams used at Caernarfon Castle in 1911 when recording the Investiture of the Prince of Wales. This subject was thus a nationalistic allegory that was both contemporary and of special relevance to the artist.
Portrait of David Lloyd George (1911)
Portrait of David Lloyd George (1911)

[edit] Portraits

The Red Dress (1917)
The Red Dress (1917)

[edit] Landscapes

  • The Red Dress The artist's wife at Barmouth Island, 1917. Exhibited in Art in Wales, The Early Years, 1900-1956, National Museum of Wales, 1969. In the Collection of the National Museum of Wales (purchased at the Christopher Williams Memorial Exhibition, Palser Gallery, London, 1935), and currently in the Office of the Secretary of State for Wales in Whitehall.
  • The Casbah, Tangiers This picture is one of numerous landscapes painted during a three month visit to Spain and Morocco in Spring 1914.
  • Holidays - Village Girls at Llangrannog Painting in collection of National Library of Wales.
Holidays - Village Girls at Llangrannog (1915)
Holidays - Village Girls at Llangrannog (1915)


[edit] References

  • Williams, Jeremiah (ed.) (1955). "Christopher Williams RBA : an account of his life and appreciations of his work" (in English). Caernarfon: Delyn Press. ISBN. 
  • Fraser Jenkins, A. D. (1973). "Christopher Williams Centenary 1873-1973 [catalogue of Exhibitions At] National Museum of Wales, Cardiff, 31 March-22 April, Glynn Vivian Art Gallery, Swansea, 5 May-2 June, Town Hall, Maesteg, 18 June-7 July" (in English). Cardiff: National Museum of Wales. ISBN 072000036X. 
  • Hall of Fame - Bridgend County Council