Jonathan Myles-Lea

Jonathan Myles-Lea
Born 1969 (age 4647)
Blackpool, England
Known for Painting
Notable work Cliveden (1996), Somerleyton Hall (1998), Highgrove (2008), Highgrove - The Sundial Garden (2008)
Patron(s) Sir Roy Strong

Jonathan Myles-Lea (born 1969)[1] is an English painter of country houses, historic buildings, and landscapes in a miniaturist technique, typically taking the form of aerial views. Myles-Lea also works in portraiture, creates abstract paintings and installations. Clients have included Prince Charles, The Prince of Wales and the National Trust of Great Britain.

Life and career

Myles-Lea was born in the Lake District in Northwest England. Much of his early life was spent in this region of the UK with walks and outdoor activities. He was introduced to the series of walking guides written and illustrated by Alfred Wainwright. The pen and ink drawings included with these guides were an early influence on Myles-Lea's emerging style. He was educated first at Hutton Grammar School and won an arts scholarship to attend Malvern College in Worcestershire from the ages of 15 until 18; he won the painting prizes in 1985 and his senior year, 1986. In 1988 he traveled extensively in Europe making a modern Grand Tour study of art and architecture. He gained an Honours Degree in 'The History of Art & Architecture' from Westfield College, The University of London in 1991.

He worked for three years in arts broadcasting. He held positions as a press and PR officer for arts and entertainment programmes, and a continuity announcer at Channel 4 TV. He also produced and directed an adaptation of Brian Friel's play The Faith Healer. He became a member of The Colony Room, where he was introduced to the renowned Anglo-Irish painter Francis Bacon, who encouraged him to undertake a professional career in painting.[1]

In 1992, Myles-Lea left Channel 4 and went to assist a friend for a year in the restoration of two historic buildings in the British countryside.[2] These were, Bettisfield Park, in Hanmer, Wales, a classical house built in 1760, and Plas Teg a Jacobean mansion in Wales. At Bettisfield, he re-created the original gardens and replanted the parkland using surviving plans from the 18th century.[3] He made his first landscape painting, Plas Teg, Clwyd (1992).[4]

In 1995, Myles-Lea was commissioned to paint image of 'The Laskett', a large formal garden created by Sir Roy Strong.[5] Shortly afterwards Myles-Lea was commissioned by Gervase Jackson-Stops OBE, a senior advisor to The National Trust to produce a plan of Stowe Landscape Gardens (1995). Patronage by The National Trust continued in the mid 1990s with a commission to produce a series of pen and ink sketches of the house and garden features and a landscape plan of the gardens at Cliveden, Taplow, Buckinghamshire.

In 1996, John Harris, writing for Sotheby's, said:

Felix Kelly owes much to Rex Whistler and was the modern master of the country house capriccio... Today Kelly's natural follower seems to be Jonathan Myles-Lea who heightens the projection of his scene with certain mysterious overtones as we can see in Plas Teg, Clwyd (1992) or Trewane Manor, Cornwall (1993).[6]

In 1997 Myles-Lea was included in the feature, "Living National Treasures" by Country Life magazine.[7]

In 2009, Myles-Lea was commissioned to create an oil painting for the cover of Country Life magazine, Dream Acres was the first commissioned painting ever to be featured on the cover of Country Life [8] for the opening issue of their 12 week Dream Acres gardening feature. Country Life publishing director Jean Christie said "This is the first cover of this kind for Country Life in its 112-year history, and the first editorial double gatefold we have produced. This is another example of Country Life breaking with tradition to showcase a magnificent issue." [8][9]

In July 2009, author and journalist Jonathan Self described Myles-Lea as 'The successor to Stubbs and Constable' [10][11]

In September 2009, Grosvenor Estates asked Myles-Lea to provide artworks in collaboration with Linley to furnish a recently renovated townhouse in Lower Belgrave Street.

Myles-Lea's main work is his paintings of historic buildings, country houses and their gardens and estates. These are portrayed in a traditional landscape view, and also from an aerial perspective. The landscape paintings are generally in the range of 42" x 30", executed using a miniaturist technique. He has painted portraits of Evelyn H. Lauder, Senior Corporate Vice President, The Estée Lauder Companies Inc, (2004), and Brian Avon, Director of Global Visual Merchandising, Aveda, (2004).

His work has been exhibited at Sotheby's [12][13] and The British Library in London.[14]

His pictures have been featured in The Artist and the Country House by John Harris, The Artist and the Garden by Sir Roy Strong and The Story of Gardening by Penelope Hobhouse.

A number of his abstract works have also appeared as the artwork on the covers of a series of novellas by the art historian and writer Stephen Little.[15]

He also appeared as a guest of the broadcaster Trevor Barnes in his BBC World Service radio programme about the spiritual significance of garden design A Place in Paradise: Spiritual Gardens.[16]

Studios

Myles-Lea lived and worked in Brussels during 2002. It was during this residency in the Belgian capital that he vigorously promoted his work to mainland European clients building on early successes from commissions such as Kasteel Wylre (commissioned by Marlies & Jo Eyck, 1999). Myles-Lea lived and worked in New York during 2003/4. It was during this period in New York that he continued to develop his painting of abstract pictures building on the influences he had experienced whilst living in Brussels. Myles-Lea occupied a studio in Belsize Park, Hampstead from 2004-2006. The house had previously been the wartime home of the artists Ben Nicholson and Barbara Hepworth. Relocating from Hampstead in the latter part of 2006, Myles-Lea took an apartment in Wyndham Place, Marylebone, which was his principal residence and studio until October 2011.

Myles-Lea is now in residence at The Folly, within the grounds of Sir Roy Strong's Laskett Garden at Much Birch in Herefordshire. This is now his principal residence and studio.

Exhibitions

The following exhibitions have featured work by Jonathan Myles-Lea

Works

Selected paintings

References

  1. 1 2 Chandler, Elizabeth. "King of His Domain" (December 2013). C Magazine. p. 140. Retrieved 11 July 2014.
  2. "Jonathan Myles-Lea - Biography". Artlaborgallery.com. Retrieved 2016-01-30.
  3. Harris, John (1996). The Artist and the Country House, Sotheby's.
  4. Country Life (2009-05-05). "Welcome to Dream Acres". Country Life. Retrieved 2016-01-30.
  5. 1 2
  6. Country Life magazine, 22 April 2009
  7. Country Life magazine, 1 July 2009. pp.52
  8. Avery, Collin (1996) Artists & Country Houses at Sotheby's The Financial Times newspaper - January 1996 pp.13-14
  9. Hall, Michael (1996) Only a Picture of a House Country Life magazine - 11 January 1996. pp.26.
  10. 1 2
  11. "Of Love and Knowledge hosted on WordPress". Ofloveandknowledge.com. Retrieved 2016-01-30.
  12. "Index | Place in Paradise". BBC World Service. Retrieved 2016-01-30.
  13. The Artist and the Country House - Sotheby's (1996)
  14. World of Interiors Painting the West Country House and Garden - A Review of The Holburne Museum's Exhibition World of Interiors. February 2006. pp 112-113.
  15. 1 2
  16. "Internal News - 06 March 2006 - University of Bath". Bath.ac.uk. 2006-03-06. Retrieved 2016-01-30.
  17. Strong, Sir Roy (1997)The Roy Strong Diaries Weidenfeld & Nicolson
  18. Strong, Sir Roy (2000) The Artist & the Garden Yale University Press
  19. Strong, Sir Roy (2004) The Laskett - The Story of a Garden Transworld Publishers
  20. Homes and Antiques Magazine, February 2007, pg.20
  21. Country Life magazine (1997) The Painting of Hanbury Hall Country Life magazine - 17 July 1997. pp.82.
  22. Pavord, Anna Gresgarth Hall Gardens Illustrated magazine. April 1999. pp. 46.
  23. Paintings 2006-2010: Highgrove, Myles-Lea.com
  24. "CanChange". Gensler.com. Retrieved 2016-01-30.

Further reading

External links


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