Frances Macdonald (artist)
For the Scottish artist, Frances MacDonald,(1873—1921) see Frances MacDonald.
Frances Macdonald (12 April 1914-2002), was an English painter known for her panoramic scenes painted in Wales, the south of France and in London during World War II.[1]
Early life
Frances Macdonald was born in Wallasey, Chesire. She trained at Wallasey School of Art between 1930 and 1934, before studying at the Royal College of Art until 1938.[2] Whilst at the RCA Macdonald met her future husband, the artist Leonard Appelbee.
World War II
Throughout World War II Macdonald received a number of short-term contracts and commissions for individual pictures from the War Artists' Advisory Committee,WAAC, and the Recording Britain project that kept her employed as an artist throughout the conflict. Macdonalds commissions included both nursing scenes, which WAAC often allocated to women artists, and heavy industrial production and repair work. The first picture Macdonald submitted to WAAC, showing people in a shelter at Queen Alexandra's Military Hospital at Millbank during an air raid was deemed unacceptable due to the evident fear and apprehension portrayed. A second hospital painting was accepted in January 1941 and a new depiction of the Millbank air raid was accepted in November 1941. When the QAM Hospital was evacuated to Oxford, Macdonald followed and was permitted to paint at the nearby aircraft dump at Cowley. This resulted in three paintings, one of which was declined by WAAC. During the war, other paintings by Macdonald were accepted by the Committee but were then prohibited from going on public display by wartime censorship, if for example they showed structures built after 1939. In September 1941, she returned to London to paint a cityscape showing St Paul's Cathedral. Later commissions included the London Docks, aircraft repair shops and Bailey bridges plus a portrait of their inventor Donald Bailey.[3] In all, nineteen works by Macdonald were acquired by WAAC, including Building the Mulberry Harbour, London Docks (1944) which was requested by the Tate for its permanent collection at the end of the war.[4] The Imperial War Museum also has a number of works by Macdonald.[5]
Later life
After the war, Macdonald had her first solo exhibition at the Wildenstein Gallery in 1947. In 1951, the Arts Council commissioned a large landscape painting from Macdonald for the exhibition 60 Paintings for '51, which was part of the Festival of Britain celebrations in London. Macdonald produced a painting of Penrhyn Quarry, entitled The Welsh Singer, whilst Leonard Appelbee contributed the painting One-man Band to the same exhibition.[6] As well as teaching art, Macdonald also exhibited at the Alfred Brod Gallery in 1961.[7] In 1989 Francis and Leonard moved from the West Country to Kincardine-on-Forth and then to Aberdeen, to be near their only daughter. Leonard died in 2000, two years before Francis.[8]
References
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- ↑ Tate. "Frances Macdonald 1914-2002". Tate. Retrieved 4 September 2013.
- ↑ Frances Spalding (1990). 20th Century Painters and Sculptors. Antique Collectors' Club. ISBN 1 85149 106 6.
- ↑ Imperial War Museum. "Mrs Appelbee". Imperial War Museum. Retrieved 4 September 2013.
- ↑ Kathleen Palmer (2011). Women War Artists. Tate Publishing/Imperial War Museum. ISBN 978-1-85437-989-4.
- ↑ BBC/Public Catalogue Foundation. "Your Paintings: Frances Macdonald 1914-2002". BBC/Public Catalogue Foundation. Retrieved 6 November 2013.
- ↑ Christopher Proudlove (2011). "Forgotten artist of true genius". WriteAntiques blog. Retrieved 4 September 2013.
- ↑ Art Fortune. "Frances Macdonald 1914-2002". Art Fortune.com. Retrieved 4 September 2013.
- ↑ David Buckman (24 June 2000). "Leonard Appelbee". The Herald (Scotland). Retrieved 4 September 2013.