Helen Sutherland Explained

Helen Christian Sutherland (24 February 1881 – 29 April 1965), married name Helen Denman, was an English art patron and collector.[1]

Life

She was the daughter of Sir Thomas Sutherland, and his only surviving child. She married Richard Denman in 1904; the marriage was annulled in 1913.[1] They had separated in 1909; Denman married May Spencer in 1914.[2]

After her marriage failed, Sutherland began to collect art. Initially she took guidance from Freddy Mayor of the Mayor Gallery. From the mid-1920s she collected mainly from a group of artist friends.[3] In 1929 she took a lease on Rock Hall, Northumberland.[1] She was an early patron of the Ashington Group.

David Jones met Sutherland through Jim Ede;[4] Ben and Winifred Nicholson met her through the artist Constance Lane, in 1925.[1] Through Michael Roberts and his wife Janet Adam Smith, the poet Kathleen Raine was introduced to Sutherland, who fostered her two children with Charles Madge during World War II.[5] [6]

Sutherland was one of Piet Mondrian's early English supporters, buying a picture by 1938.[7] From 1939 she lived at Cockley Moor, near Dockray, Penrith, now in Cumbria, in a house redesigned by Leslie Martin in Modernist style.[8] She left her art collection to Nicolete Gray.[1]

Notes and References

  1. 40712. Cherrie. Trelogan. Sutherland, Helen Christian.
  2. Book: K. Gildart. D. Howell. N. Kirk. Dictionary of Labour Biography. 29 April 2016. Springer. 978-0-230-50018-1. 56.
  3. 66078. Frances. Spalding. Gray, Nicolete Mary.
  4. Web site: Papers of Harold Stanley 'Jim' Ede, archiveshub.ac.uk. 19 July 2016.
  5. Raine . Kathleen . 2001 . ESSAY: Rediscovering the Source . India International Centre Quarterly . 28 . 4 . 336–346 . 0376-9771.
  6. 92258. Christopher. Fletcher. Raine, Kathleen Jessie.
  7. Bowness . Sophie . 1990 . Mondrian in London: Letters to Ben Nicholson and Barbara Hepworth . The Burlington Magazine . 132 . 1052 . 782–788 . 0007-6287.
  8. Book: Neal Alexander. David Cooper. Poetry & Geography: Space & Place in Post-war Poetry. 15 July 2013. Oxford University Press. 978-1-78138-807-5. 152.