Loch Lomond

George Leslie Hunter

DESCRIPTION

Hunter first visited Loch Lomond in 1924 where the colourful houseboats inspired a series of works in homage to Matisse. He returned in 1931 to spend the summer on a houseboat with his young girlfriend, Marnie Scrafton. She described him as ‘a gay laughing bohemian with a wonderful knowledge of the world.’ His happiness produced a harvest of luminous paintings that distil the lessons of his lifelong search for the balance of colour, light and form. He died a few months after leaving Loch Lomond in December 1931, aged 54. 

DETAILS
  • Artist

    George Leslie Hunter

  • Date

    Unknown

  • Medium

    Oil on canvas

  • Object number

    468

  • Dimensions unframed

    55.9 × 45.7 cm

  • Dimensions framed

    77 × 66 cm

  • Place depicted

    Loch Lomond National Nature Reserve (2643815)

  • Marks

    Signed bottom right

ARTIST PROFILE

George Leslie Hunter, 1877-1931

Born in into a well-to-do family from the Isle of Bute , Hunter’s formative life as an artist was spent in California where, aged fifteen, he had emigrated with his family. A passionate draughtsman and despite no formal training, he became an accomplished illustrator for leading publications in San Francisco. A striking Bohemian with an eye for the ladies, he had a rackety love life fathering an illegitimate daughter in Paris before the war.

Fired by a trip to Europe in 1904, he determined to break free of illustration to become a painter. His ambitions turned to ashes when all his new work was destroyed in the 1906 San Francisco earthquake on the eve of his first solo exhibition.

Aged 29, Hunter retreated to Glasgow to rebuild his life as an artist, which resulted in a successful exhibition in 1913 of still lifes inspired by old Dutch and modern French masters. Spending the war labouring (lightly) on a cousin’s farm in Lanarkshire, he continued to push the boundaries of his art until he found his path as a colourist triggered by his discovery in 1919 of the landscape and shoreline of Fife.

Hunter’s vocation as a colourist and his understanding of modern masters, particularly Van Gogh and Matisse, resulted in some of the most individualistic and authentic works by the group. However his chaotic private life marked by heavy drinking and ‘nerve attacks’ led to periods of artistic block. He died from medical neglect in 1931, aged 54.