Sir William Russell FLINT (1880-1969)
"Amroth"
Watercolour signed 10" x 14"
Wash Line mount on museum board, gilded frame.
£9,950
An excellent painting by one of the giants of 20th Century Art. Born in Edinburgh, 4th April 1880, his remarkable talent was discovered at an early age. Having been a student at the Royal Institution School of Art in Edinburgh, and serving a six year apprenticeship at a large printing works, he decided to move to London to become a medical illustrator at the age of 20.In 1903 he joined the Illustrated London News which took his talents to the far reaches of the British Empire thanks to its extensive distribution. Post World War I, William Russell Flint's artistic career began to flourish. He painted in France and Spain (until the Civil War), where he produced wonderful paintings reflecting the local scenery and culture. He was elected Associate of the Royal Academy in 1924, full member in 1933 and in 1936 became President of the Royal Society of Painters in Watercolour. After living in Devon during the Second World War, he and his wife moved back to London where the post war period became Russell Flint's greatest. In 1947 William Russell Flint was knighted. In 192 his work was acknowledged by a retrospective exhibition in the Diploma Gallery of the Royal Academy. At the time, Charles Wheeler, the President, paid tribute to the artist, describing his watercolour technique as a 'baffling skill'.