Widely known as the greatest statesman of the 20th century and the savior of Western civilization, a Nobel Prize winner, and the subject of a recent Academy Award-nominated film, more people than ever are taking an interest in Sir Winston Churchill (1874-1965). Yet few are aware that he was an avid painter. Eleven oil paintings by Churchill from the 1920s to 1940s, from the collection of the family of the late Julian Sandys, the eldest of Churchill’s grandchildren, will join the spotlight in The Paintings of Sir Winston Churchill, on view from March 21 – May 30, 2018, at Heather James Fine Art, Palm Desert, CA. The nine landscapes along with a coastal scene and a still life depict friends’ estates, gardens, as well as family vacation spots, including some of Churchill’s favorite travel destinations in France and Morocco.
These paintings formed part of a touring exhibition in Georgia commemorating the 50th anniversary of Churchill’s death that was organized by the Millennium Gate Museum, Atlanta, GA (2014-15). Subsequently, the paintings have been shown at various exhibitions on Churchill organized in collaboration with the National Churchill Museum at Westminster College, Fulton, MO. Locations include the Mildred Lane Kemper Art Museum at Washington University, St. Louis, MO (2015-16); the RMS Queen Mary, Long Beach, CA (2016); and the Society of the Four Arts, Palm Beach, FL (2017-18). Prior to 2014, the paintings graced the walls of Sandys family homes in the United Kingdom.
Winston Churchill was age 40 when he began to paint — at one of the lowest moments of his life. It was June 1915, shortly after his forced resignation as First Lord of the Admiralty following the disastrous Dardanelles campaign. One Sunday afternoon, his sister-in-law Lady Gwendoline handed him a paintbrush belonging to his young nephew. In his 1921 essay “Painting as a Pastime” Churchill recalled, “And then it was that the Muse of Painting came to my rescue.” Painting provided a refuge from the stresses of politics and journalism, and from what Churchill called “the black dog” of depression. Moreover, Churchill saw painting as a testing ground for leadership strengths such as audacity, humility, foresight, and strength of memory.
According to Duncan Sandys, a great-grandson of Winston Churchill and son of Julian Sandys, “Although painting was just a hobby, Churchill learned new skills which he used in his political and diplomatic life. It gave him a sanctuary during adversity and, I believe, made him more effective in 1940 as Hitler prepared to invade Britain.”
He was inspired by the Impressionists and enjoyed painting en plein air. And wherever he went — on vacation or for work — Churchill was accompanied by his paints, brushes, canvases, and an easel. His medium of choice was oil, and his preferred subjects were landscapes and seascapes. His approximately 550 canvases — or his “daubs” as he called them — tell the story of his travels across Europe, North America, and North Africa. He painted the most in the South of France. Coast Scene Near Marseilles, c. 1935, and The Sunken Garden of La Dragonnière, Cap Martin, c. 1930s (given by Clementine as a wedding present to her grandson Julian Sandys) on view recall the palette and the broad brushstrokes of the Impressionists he admired.
Churchill was largely self-taught as a painter although his style was developed through mentoring from friends and accomplished painters such as Sir Oswald Birley, Sir John and Lady (Hazel) Lavery, Paul Maze, Sir William Nicholson, and Walter Sickert. He visited museums and galleries to study great works, and copied paintings by Charles Daubigny, John Singer Sargent, and Paul Cézanne.
Throughout his life Churchill was always modest about the quality of his work. In 1921 he sent five paintings under an assumed name (Charles Morin) to an exhibition at the Galerie Druet in Paris. In 1947 he again employed a pseudonym (David Winter) when submitting two works to London’s Royal Academy of Arts for its summer exhibition — his true name revealed only after the two were accepted. He received further recognition as an artist when the Royal Academy elected him an Honorary Academician Extraordinary in 1948, and held a solo exhibition of his works that toured internationally in 1958-59 — the institution’s first and only exhibition of an amateur artist. Among the paintings on view, Lake Near Breccles in Autumn, c. 1930, On the Var, c. 1935 (which hung in the Churchill’s post-war London home, and later in Clementine’s London flat until her death in 1977), and The Mill at St.-Georges-Motel, c. 1930, were exhibited respectively at the Royal Academy’s summer exhibitions in 1949, 1952, and 1962.