John Young Hunter (1874-1955)

Artist Name John Young Hunter (1874-1955)
Title Balinese Dancer
Description This stunning British 1920's tempera oil on board painting is by noted artist John Young Hunter. It was painted circa 1927 and the composition is a full length portrait of a beautiful female Balinese dancer dancing, with three musicians crouched behind her, set against a mural covered wall. The view point is looking up at her from the front. She is wearing an ornate gold headdress and flowering blue patterned skirt with beaded top and performing intricate hand movements. The colours are really vibrant and Hunter has perfectly captured her movement and energy. This is fantastic painting with great detail and brushwork and an excellent example of Hunter's work.

Signed lower right.
Provenance Sotheby's London November 15th 1995 Lot 214.

Private collection
Medium Oil on Board
Size 30 x 47 inches
Frame Housed in a complementary frame, 54 inches by 37 inches and in good condition.
Condition Good condition.
Biography John Young Hunter (1874-1955) was born at Glasgow on 29 October 1874, son of marine painter Colin Hunter, R.A., (1841-1904) and his wife Isabella Rattray née Young (1852-1940), a distinguished pianist, who married at Govan, Lanark, Scotland on 29 October 1874, Colin Hunter was a close friend of artist John Singer Sargent (1856-1925). John was educated at Linton House, St Paul's and studied at Clifton College, Bristol and at the Royal Academy Schools under Sargent, winning two silver medals, as well as studying at the University of London. He married at Kensington, London in 1899, Mary Young Hunter, née Towgood, but they divorced about 1920 when John married at Manhattan, New York on 3 January 1921, Eva Renz Schroeer (1888-1967) and they had an only daughter. A figure and portrait painter and an Associate of the Royal Society of Portrait Painters 1914, exhibiting at Royal Society of British Artists; Fine Art Society; Royal Glasgow Institute of the Fine Arts; Walker Art Gallery; Leicester Galleries; Manchester City Art Gallery; New Gallery and at the Royal Academy from 1895. He also exhibited at the Royal Institute of Painters in Water Colours and the Royal Institute of Oil Painters, from London 1894 and 1908, Moreton-in-the-Marsh, Gloucestershire in 1902 and from Wickhambrook, Suffolk in 1904 where he had settled at Gifford’s Hall and where their daughter Gabrielle Young Hunter was born in 1905. In 1911, a 35-year-old artist living at 9 Launceston Place, Kensington, London with his 38-year-old wife Mary and their 5-year-old daughter Gabrielle, with a nurse and two indoor servants. On 20 May 1913, Hunter sailed for Montreal, Canada and in 1915 was on the 'Lusitania' for New York, USA, pursuing his fascination with American Indians whom he had seen in Buffalo Bill's ‘Wild West Show’ in London. He again returned to England for a brief period, serving in the Royal Army Medical Corps in 1918, but in 1920 returned to America living at Santa Fe and Taos, New Mexico. Cutting his connections to the European art world, he settled in Taos and became a part of the colony of artists around Mabel Dodge Luhan (1879-1962). He had a home and studio on the eastern edge of Taos and replaced his painting of society portraits with that of Indian subjects, landscapes, and still life. John Young Hunter died at Taos, New Mexico on 9 August 1955, leaving effects to his widow, Eva Renz Young-Hunter. His work was hung at the Tate Gallery in England and in Paris at the Musee de Luxembourg. He signed his works 'J. YoungHunter' joined.
Price £14000
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