Charles Lutyens Explained

Charles Lutyens
Birth Date:1933
Birth Place:London, England
Death Date:April 2021 (age 87)
Nationality:British
Education:Bryanston School
Alma Mater:Chelsea School of Art
Slade School of Fine Art
Saint Martin's School of Art
Known For:Mosaic
oil painting; sculpture
Notable Works:Angels of the Heavenly Host (1963–68)
The Outraged Christ (2011)
Style:Figurative art
Spouse:
    Children:4 children
    Father:Ernest Lutyens
    Mother:Naomi (nee Harben) Lutyens
    Relatives:Edwin Lutyens (great uncle)
    Patrons:St Paul's, Bow Common
    Liverpool Cathedral
    Website:charleslutyens.co.uk

    Charles Lutyens (1933–2021) was an English artist and art therapist.[1] [2]

    Lutyens was born in London, England. His father was Ernest Lutyens, an officer in the Coldstream Guards, and his mother was Naomi Lutyens, who was a publicity officer at the Old Vic Theatre in south London. Lutyens was educated at Bryanston School in Dorset, where he decided to become an artist. He then studied art at the Chelsea School of Art, Slade School of Fine Art, and Saint Martin's School of Art in London, where he studied oil painting and sculpture. Subsequently, at the age of 24, he studied in Paris under the cubist painter André Lhote. He worked mainly using oil paint, but also mosaic and sculpture using clay, stone, and wood. After his studies, in 1958, Lutyens joined the "Fabyc" ("Families by Choice"[3]) community, a kibbutz-style group of people living in London, with his studio in Fulham.

    He worked on a large 800 square-foot mosaic mural, Angels of the Heavenly Host,[4] during 1963–68, at the newly consecrated St Paul's Church, Bow.[5] [6] [7] This was undertaken in collaboration with the church's architect Robert Maguire.[8] The mosaic used tesserae consisting of 700 different colours sourced by Lutyens from the island of Murano, near Venice and known for its glass-making. It is probably the largest contemporary mosaic in Britain and the largest created by one person.[9]

    Lutyens moved away from the Fabyc community in London to Oxford in 1978. Having trained for a diploma in art therapy at the Hertfordshire College of Art and Design in St Alban's, he worked as an art therapist at Oxford's Radcliffe Hospital, the Littlemore Hospital, and Harlow House in High Wycombe.

    His 15-foot wooden, iron, and steel crucifixion sculpture The Outraged Christ of 2011 was exhibited at St Paul's in Bow,[10] then at Gloucester Cathedral, and finally more permanently at Liverpool Cathedral in the Derby Transept.[11]

    He had a studio in Charlton-on-Otmoor, a village in Oxfordshire. He exhibited in joint and individual exhibitions, for example at the Hollerhaus Gallery in Munich (Germany), St Martin's Gallery in London,[12] and the Wildenstein Gallery in New York. His work is held in private collections in France, Germany, Republic of Ireland, Spain, United Kingdom, United States, and Zimbabwe. In 2024, a retrospective exhibition of Lutyens' oil paintings in the context of his work as an art therapist, A World Apart: The Work of Charles Lutyens, was held at the Bethlem Museum of the Mind[13] in Beckenham, southeast London.[14] [15] [16] [17]

    Lutyens was married twice, first to Ariane Laparra (1958–61) and later to Marianna Rothauer-Ennser (1970–2021). He had two children from each marriage.

    External links

    Notes and References

    1. News: Charles Lutyens obituary . Marianna . Lutyens . . 11 July 2021 .
    2. Artist Charles Lutyens Remembered . Marianna . Lutyens . 9–10 . The Lutyens Trust – Newsletter . The Lutyens Trust . UK . Winter 2022 . 3 September 2024 .
    3. How One's Choice (of a Way of Life) may Become a Repressive Authority . Catherine . Kuester-Ginsberg . . 20 . 3/4 . Living together – Therapeutic and Social Aspects: Proceedings of the 8th International Congress of Psychotherapy, Milan, August 25–29, 1970, Part II . 1972 . 96–101 . 45114226 . 5080518 .
    4. Web site: Charles Lutyens: Angels of the Heavenly Host . Art+Christianity . 3 September 2024 .
    5. Keith . Murray . Introduction to Lutyens' Mosaic . Churchbuilding . London . Spring 1990 .
    6. 2012 . Journal of the British Association for Modern Mosaic (BAMM) . 6 . Angels of the Heavenly Host . Charles . Lutyens .
    7. Web site: Crucifixiones de Charles Lutyens . Crucifixions of Charles Lutyens . es . Ersilias . 2 September 2024 .
    8. Obituary: Robert Maguire (1931–2019) . . Gerry . Adler . 12 February 2019.
    9. Web site: The present church of St. Paul's, Bow Common . Duncan . Ross . 2015 . 86–151 . cloudfront.net . 2 September 2024 .
    10. Web site: Charles Lutyens Exhibition – "Being in the World" . Marianna . Lutyens . The Lutyens Trust . UK . 2011 . 3 September 2024 .
    11. Web site: The Outraged Christ by Charles Lutyens . Art In The Cathedral . . UK . 2 September 2024 .
    12. Web site: Paintings by Charles Lutyens: 18th June – 30th June . St. Martin's Gallery . London . 1962 . 2 September 2024 .
    13. Web site: A World Apart: the Work of Charles Lutyens: Observations of an art therapist . Exhibitions . . UK . 8 June 2024 . 3 September 2024 .
    14. News: Artist's work in psychiatric hospitals on show . . . UK . 4 May 2024 . 3 September 2024 .
    15. News: The visionary who gave dignity to the mentally ill: A new exhibition at Bethlem's Museum of the Mind reveals how Charles Lutyens became the trailblazer for art therapy . Etan . Smallman . . UK . 6 June 2024 . 3 September 2024 .
    16. Web site: This Psychiatric Hospital Art Gallery Has A Striking New Exhibition On The Way . Will . Noble . . 3 June 2024 . 3 September 2024 .
    17. Web site: Capturing the human psyche: Charles Lutyens' paintings at Bethlem Museum of the Mind . Ian . Mansfield . ianVisits . UK . 11 June 2024 . 3 September 2024 .