The Painter Who Hated Picasso
Sporting artist Alfred Munnings loved horses, the English countryside and a good stiff drink. What he didn't like was modern art.
- By Peter Chew
- Smithsonian magazine, October 2006, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 6)
With his three brothers, young Alfred spent his days roaming the meadows and playing along the Waveney River. But this idyllic childhood came abruptly to an end at age 14, when his father bound him to a six-year apprenticeship to Page Brothers & Co., Ltd., lithographers in Norwich, 20 miles from the Munnings home in Mendham. After each ten-hour workday, Alfred would walk to the Norwich School of Art to study until 9 p.m. For a restless, energetic young man it was a grinding, often boring regimen, softened only by the occasional bottle of cheap wine and the volume of Tennyson he kept beneath his desk.
Still, Munnings thrived under the pressure of turning out imaginative advertising illustrations on short notice for such accounts as Colman’s Mustard, Waverley Cycles, and A. J. Caley & Son chocolate and cracker manufacturers. His work for Caley brought in so much business that John Shaw Tomkins, a company director, took Munnings under his wing.
In 1899, the 20-year-old artist was elected to the Royal Institute of Painters in Watercolour, and the Royal Academy of Arts accepted two of his paintings for display. In one, Stranded, a little girl in a blue pinafore and a boy struggle to free their rowboat from reeds along a riverbank. In the other, Pike-fishing in January, a lone angler stands by a stream, his collar turned up.
It's hard to overstate the importance of the Royal Academy of Arts, the prestigious society established by King George III in 1768 to compete with the French salon. Sir Joshua Reynolds was appointed first president, with membership then restricted to 40 academicians and 20 associates. Munnings celebrated his academy acceptance by going into his beloved English countryside with a friend for a hunt race meeting. "I saw the thoroughbred horses and jockeys in bright silk colours going off down the course," he later wrote. "The peaceful School of Art, the smelly artists' room at Page Brothers faded away, and I began to live!"
Not much later, his apprenticeship over, Munnings began the perilous business of making a living as an artist. It was around this time that he suffered a disaster: while lifting a puppy over a thorn barrier, a branch rebounded and a thorn pierced his right eye, blinding it. He spent six months in a Norwich nursing home with both eyes bandaged and his savings evaporating. When the bandages at last came off, he had trouble with depth perception and gauging distances, problems that would bother him the rest of his life.
To ease his way back into solvency, Munnings' mentor and first patron, Tomkins, gave him commercial assignments. Munnings also unapologetically sought solace in the bottle. He describes, with genuine affection, a particularly lethal punch made from an 18th-century recipe consisting of rum, brandy, sherry, lemons, sugar and cloves, which was "never known to fail in making a night."
In 1904 he moved to Swainsthorpe, five miles south of Norwich, where he rented rooms and a studio in a farmhouse. There he assembled a band of ponies, horses and a donkey to serve as models. He bought a blue caravan with a stovepipe peeking out of the roof and a flatbed cart to carry a tent, a big umbrella, an easel, oil paints, canvases, turpentine, brushes, piles of paint rags, as well as watercolor materials.
He acquired the most picturesque of his human models—a youth nicknamed Shrimp. This young gypsy, "a wild, uncivilized primitive," also helped with the animals and baggage, but caused Munnings many a headache. Shrimp could neither read nor write; he drank too much; fell into minor scrapes with the law; and proved a cunning predator of farmers' daughters along the fields and down the tranquil lanes of Norfolk and Suffolk. But Shrimp was also indispensable. Munnings had him fit out with corduroy trousers, and a black waistcoat, yellow kerchief and soft cap. Thus caparisoned, he appears in many early Munnings works, including one in which Shrimp whips a thundering herd of ponies up and over a stream bank; Coming Through the Gap, as it is called, brought $2,274,000 at a Christie's auction of 21 works in June 2002 that brought more than $8.5 million.
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Comments (7)
Thank you for a full commentary on Alfred Munnings. I believe there was a first wife, also an artist who he met in Cornwall.
Posted by Bridget Wright on October 17,2012 | 04:56 PM
where can i obtain a copy of munnings gone to cliff thanks kt
Posted by sue hawes on January 27,2012 | 12:59 PM
very good site, liked it immensley, and wasnt looking for it. ch
Posted by chantal haddon on January 21,2011 | 02:37 PM
I'm a descendent/relative of Munnings. Alfred's daughter Edie Munnings (later Edie Stratton) was my grandmother's cousin and I have a watercolour painting which Edie gave my Grandma. It appears to be of Krishnamurti giving an address to a group of followers. Is there any information anywhere about Edie Stratton and her work?
Posted by Jane Buxton on May 23,2009 | 07:20 AM
The Arts Club, 40 Dover Street, Mayfair, London W1 Is a London Gentleman's Club of which Munnings was a member and has the most marvellous, and rather too long live recording of Munnings speaking at a Club event, during which he trashes Picasso! It goes on and on and shows how well he thought of himself. He was of course right, however, Picasso has gets a look in too now. You would enjoy listening to this unique recording and I suggest that you contact Brian Clivaz, Secretary and General Manager, in order to secure a copy of this valuable archive. I am a former Director of the Arts Club, and it was essential in Munnings's day to be a member of this Club in order to become an RA. Wendy Harman
Posted by Wendy Harman on May 2,2009 | 05:46 PM
i am looking for a Munnings quote where he speaks of loosing sleep because of the horse...any help would be so much apprecited
Posted by karen vanderlaan on September 2,2008 | 03:41 PM
very informative - much more so than most British web sites. Thanks C Haddon
Posted by chantal haddon on July 14,2008 | 07:57 AM