Anthony Devas | |
---|---|
Born |
Anthony Devas 8 January 1911 Bromley, Kent |
Died | 21 December 1958 London |
(aged 47)
Nationality | British |
Education | |
Known for | Portrait painting |
Thomas Anthony Devas (8 January 1911 – 21 December 1958) was a British portrait painter who was associated with members of the Euston Road School.
Devas was born in Bromley in Kent, the second of four children to Thomas Gronow Devas, the chairman of the Devas Routledge textile firm, and Marjorie Cecilia Watson. Devas attended Repton School and entered the Slade School of Fine Art in 1927, aged 16. At the Slade he studied alongside Rodrigo Moynihan, William Coldstream and Robin Darwin. In 1931 Devas married his fellow Slade student Nicolette Macnamara, whose sister Caitlin would later marry Dylan Thomas. Through the Macnamara sisters Devas met, and was influenced in his portrait painting by, Augustus John.
During the Second World War, Devas served as an air raid warden in London as his persistent ill-health had excluded him from military service. Devas held his first major solo exhibition at the Agnew's Gallery in 1941 and he continued with his portrait painting, most notably with portraits of both Nicolette and Caitlin and also his friend Laurie Lee. The War Artists' Advisory Committee, WAAC, commissioned several portraits from Devas of individuals who had distinguished themselves in the conflict, including Wilfred Thesiger and Captain George Hunt. At other points in the war WAAC purchased a number of portraits from Devas, including one of the Matron of Charing Cross Hospital.
After the war Devas's reputation as a society portrait painter continued to grow. In 1945 he was elected to the Royal Society of Portrait Painters and in 1952 he was elected an Associate of the Royal Academy. He lived and worked at the Rossetti Studios in Chelsea and at one time shared studio space with the artist Norman Hepple.