Richard Hamilton, a brief history
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Richard Hamilton. Born London, 24th April 1922.
Hamilton was born in London. He was educated at the Royal Academy
Schools from 1938 to 1940, then studied engineering draughtsmanship
at a Government Training Centre in 1940, then worked as a 'jig and
tool' designer. He returned in 1946 to the Royal Academy Schools,
from which he was expelled for 'not profiting from the instruction
being given in the painting school', then attended the Slade School
of Art from 1948 to 1951.
An exhibition of his engravings was held at Gimpel Fils, London, in
1950. These were inspired by D'Arcy Wentworth Thompson's 1913 text
On Growth and Form which had been republished in 1942 and was a
seminal influence on Hamilton's early work. Hamilton devised and
designed the exhibitions Growth and Form at the Institute of
Contemporary Arts in 1951, and Man, Machine and Motion at the
Hatton Gallery, Newcastle upon Tyne and the Institute of
Contemporary Arts in 1955. He exhibited at the Hanover Gallery in
1955, and participated in This is Tomorrow at the Whitechapel
Gallery in 1956, for which he produced a collage entitled Just what
is it that makes today's homes so different, so appealing? for the
poster and catalogue. With Victor Pasmore in 1957 he devised and
organised an Exhibit, at the Hatton Gallery and the Institute of
Contemporary Arts.
Hamilton was a member of the Independent Group, formed in the 1950s
by a group of artists and writers at the Institute of Contemporary
Arts, whose symposiums contributed to the development of Pop art in
Britain. He was one of the prime practitioners of the critic
Lawrence Alloway's theory of a 'fine/pop art continuum'. Hamilton
interpreted this as meaning that 'all art is equal - there was no
hierarchy of value. Elvis was to one side of a long line while
Picasso was strung out on the other side ... TV is neither less nor
more legitimate an influence than, for example, is New York
Abstract Expressionism'.
Hamilton taught at the London Central School of Arts and Crafts and
University of Newcastle upon Tyne; he gave up teaching full-time in
1966. He designed a typographic version of Duchamp's Green Box,
published in 1960, and in 1965-6, with Duchamp's guidance,
reconstructed Duchamp's The Bride Stripped Bare by her Bachelors,
Even (The Large Glass). Keen to embrace certain types of technology
within his art, Hamilton began creating computer-generated works in
the 1980s. He has had a long career as a print-maker, and in 1983
won the World Print Council Award. In 1991 he married the artist
Rita Donagh. Retrospective exhibitions of Hamilton's work have been
held at the Hanover Gallery, 1964, the Tate Gallery, 1970 and 1992,
and abroad. He was Britain's representative at the 1993 Venice
Biennale.
Extract from Tate Gallery website (http://www.tate.org.uk)
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