The Golden Age of Cornish Art
Roger HILTON

Click on an image to enlarge

Please contact gallery@greatatlantic.co.uk or 01736 788911 to determine the exact location of this work



Abstract Composition I
(c.1951) 14 x 45cm oil on board £16,625


Abstract Composition II
(c.1951) 45 x 14cm oil on board £16,625

Roger Hilton (1911-1975)
Roger Hilton was a British-German painter who first studied at the Slade School before attending the Bissiere School in Paris during the 1930’s. He began painting abstracts after 1950 based on his many visits to Paris and also the influence of Mondrian, whose work he encountered while in the Netherlands in 1953. From 1955 to 1956, his work was shaped by the work of the St. Ives School. After 1961, Hilton began painting lively female nudes that disappointed many of his followers at the time but are now some of his most famous works. The last years of his life were spent bedridden from a muscular disease, but he continued to paint in gouache until his death in Botallack, near St Just-in-Penwith in 1975.