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Raymond Piper

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Raymond Piper HRUA HRHA MUniv (4 April 1923 – 13 July 2007)[1] was a British botanist and an artist.[2]

Raymond Piper
HRUA HRHA
Born4 April 1923
Died13 July 2007 (aged 84)
NationalityBritish
EducationSelf-taught
Known forPortraiture & botanical prints

Early life

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Raymond Piper was born in London on 4 April 1923 the son of Frank Piper.[3] At the age of six his family moved to Belfast.[4] Piper attended Skegoniel Primary before receiving a general education at Belfast Royal Academy.(according to the Dictionary of Ulster Biography he was educated at Mercantile College/later known after moving to Jordanstown as Belfast High School).in [5]

Piper attended nightclasses at Belfast School of Art for one year, where he was taught by Cornish artist Newton Penprase.[4] For a time he was a teacher at the Royal School Dungannon.[6] In 1950 Piper won a CEMA travel award which took him to Paris for a year.[7]

Piper worked at Belfast shipbuilders Harland and Wolff between 1940 and 1946 where he carried sketch books in his pockets to fill in time between jobs. He sketched his fellow workers and pictures of Cave Hill, but he had no interest in capturing ships on paper.[8]

Piper joined the Belfast Naturalists' Field Club[3] in 1946 where he was twice president in 1971–1972 and 1983–1984. He became an Honorary Member in 1990. He took great interest in the flowers of Ireland especially orchids.[9]

In 1947 fellow Belfast Naturalist Richard Hayward asked him to submit his best works to Hayward's publishers. They were impressed and shortly thereafter Piper gave up his engineering apprenticeship to become a professional artist.[10] His main income was as a portrait painter and he included among his subjects several Lord Mayors of London and Belfast.[6]

Artistic career

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Piper began a long association with the Ulster Academy of Arts in 1942 when he showed three works 'Dad', Sunrise Knockah 1941, and April Day,[11] and exhibited a work each in 1944 and 1946, before an offering of two child portraits and a glass case called The White Goddess in 1948.[11] Piper showed a portrait of Belfast coroner Dr HP Lowe along with a watercolour landscape at the 1950 annual exhibition after the Ulster Academy of Arts had been granted their Royal Charter.[11] Piper contributed work to the short-lived Ulster literary magazine Rann, founded by Roy McFadden and Barbara Edwards (née Hunter) in 1948.[12]

Piper began his career in illustrating old Irish buildings and sites of archaeological interest. Many of these drawings were used to illustrate books by fellow member of the Belfast Naturalists' Field Club, Richard Hayward, such as Ulster and the City of Belfast (1950), Connacht and the City of Galway (1952) and Munster and the City of Cork (1964).[6] The latter publication contained 126 sketches by Piper, drawn on location in Munster in the spring of 1960 when Piper and his botanical friend explored the region together.[10] The Belfast Telegraph's book reviewer writes,

"Perhaps the highest praise one can pay these collaborators is that their work is comparable to and in some ways excels Stephen Gywm and Hugh Thomson...Mr Piper contributes some exquisite sketches of the flora of the region which contains a remarkable number of plants and rocks."[13]

Piper also held an exhibition with Richard Hayward at the Glenmachan Tower Hotel in Belfast earlier that year.[14] Speaking of his choice of illustrator for Ulster and the City of Belfast, author Richard Hayward said,

"My choice of this young Belfast artist has turned out to be fortunate even beyond my high expectations and I would like to place on record my warm regard for the cheerful manner in which this young man has ever sought to accomplish the tasks which I set him as well as the deep satisfaction which the brilliance and integrity of his work has brought me."

The foreword to the book was written by Maurice Walsh, author of the Quiet Man.[15]

The Council for the Encouragement of Music and the Arts awarded Piper a travel scholarship of £50 in 1950 when he had a choice of two destinations, Paris or Vienna.[16]

Although Piper rarely exhibited he presented work at International Faculty of Arts in London in 1953.[3] He also displayed three portraits including oils of ex-Belfast Lord Mayor Sir John Harcourt, and Ulster poet John Irvine, at the Royal Hibernian Academy in 1958.[17]

In 1953 Piper presented his first solo exhibition at the CEMA Gallery in Belfast.[6] The show was primarily portraits of local luminaries such as the producer and actor Harold Goldblatt, the playwright Patrick Riddell, and Lord Mayor James Norritt.[18] The exhibition included none of Piper's recent topographical drawings but did include pastels of happy children and a few pencil drawings of old Belfast commissioned by CEMA for their local collections.[19]

Early in 1956 Piper completed a fourteen foot high mural of Christ on the Sea of Galilee, The Flying Angel for the Belfast Seaman's Mission,[20] where he was to return in 1977 to conduct repairs on the damaged painting.[21] In May 1956 Piper completed a mural commission for the mammal house at Belfast Zoo.[22] He exhibited at the CEMA gallery in 1957 alongside several of his Ulster contemporaries, all former recipients of CEMA travel bursaries.[7] Piper also contributed a coloured print for the cover of Hayward's Border Foray in 1957.[23]

Piper was commissioned to paint the Prime Minister of Northern Ireland, Lord Brookeborough on the occasion of his seventieth birthday in 1958.[24]

Piper presented a one-man show at the Royal Watercolour Society Galleries, London in 1961.[3] The show comprised 64 works and was opened by one of the subjects, the Lord Mayor of London Bernard Whaley-Cohen.[25] In 1962 Piper hosted a solo exhibition in the Whitla Hall at Queen's University, Belfast.[7] The Coffee Shop at the corner of College Street and Queens Street, Belfast, was the venue for an exhibition of two series of Piper's work in the same year.[26] Piper made several contributions including a double portrait Audrey and Barbara and the nurseryman Sam McGredy to the Ulster Artists exhibition at the Magee Gallery also in 1962. His contemporaries on this occasion were T P Flanagan, Dan O'Neill, Kenneth Webb, Rowland Hill, Maurice Wilks and Frank McKelvey.[27]

British Railways commissioned Piper to produce a poster in 1962[28] which promoted the Norfolk Broads.[29]

In 1964 Piper was also elected Associate of the Royal Ulster Academy of Arts, at the same time as Romeo Toogood, George C Morrison, David Crone, and future President Richard J Croft.[30] He showed a portrait of the academy's president and Belfast's artistic elderstatesman William Conor, and Oriental Girls at the Annual show that year.[11] An open-air exhibition with many of Piper's RUA contemporaries was held at the Shambles Gallery in Hillsborough in August 1964, curated by Patric Stevenson, which exposed Piper's portrait of William Conor to a wider audience.[31] Piper was also present when the Rolling Stones took an overcrowded Ulster Hall by storm in July 1964, with one sketch appearing in the Belfast Telegraph alongside a review of the gig.[32]

The Botanic Inn on Belfast's Malone Road was the venue for a joint show with Jack W Gray in 1964.[33] Piper also showed paintings of Short's aircraft at Farnborough Airshow in the same year.[10]

A year later he held his first show in Dublin at the Brown Thomas Little Theatre Gallery.[7] The Brown Thomas exhibition comprised 50 portraits and landscapes in pastel, oil and pencil and included a number of sketches previously published in Hayward's Munster and the City of Cork.[34]

Piper revisited the Burren in 1968 where he had completed a set of works for Hayward's book on Munster and city of Cork in 1960. Piper's second visit saw him complete a series of oils on boards for Edwin Taylor and Alan Corkindale, owners of the Gregan's Castle Hotel, which had yet to be completed at the time of his first visit. The paintings originally hanged as panels but were removed during renovation work in the late 1970s when they were framed and encased in glass before their rehanging in the dining room.[35] Piper contributed 120 line and coloured illustrations to Stephen Usherwood's 1968 anthology of Shakespeare's plays Shakespeare Play by Play.[36]

Piper planned to write and publish his own book on Irish Orchids with the main aim being to promote the conservation of the thirty varieties of orchids in Ireland. By 1972 he had been writing and illustrating his book for six years. The completed illustrations were shown at an exhibition at Belfast Central Library in September 1972, but the book was never realised in his lifetime.[37]

Olympic gold medal-winning pentathlete Mary Peters was the subject for a Piper portrait unveiled at the Ulster Arts Club in 1973.[38]

Piper's orchid studies showed at the natural history section of the British Museum in 1974, and in the same year he was also awarded the John Lindley medal by the Royal Horticultural Society for his watercolours of Irish orchids. This was the first time that the medal had been awarded in Ireland.[39] The Ulster Museum also held an exhibition of Piper's botanical works in 1975[7] as did the Royal Dublin Society in the following year.[7] For his botanical works Piper was awarded a Fellowship of the Linnaean Society.[7] In 1975 he was further honoured by his election as an Associate to the Royal Ulster Academy.[40]

Piper's sketches of ballet stars including Margot Fonteyn, Rudolph Nureyev and Marie Rambert went on show at the Greater London Picture Exhibition in 1977 to mark the Silver Jubilee of reigning monarch Queen Elizabeth II. Piper had first sketched dancers in the early 1950s when the Marie Rambert troupe visited Belfast's Empire Theatre. He was subsequently invited to sketch backstage when Antoin Dolin brought the Festival Ballet to Ulster. Piper was later to be given access to sketch Nureyev in Covent Garden in 1965.[41]

The wife of the Northern Irish Secretary of State Colleen Rees was the curator of a personal selection of works from Ulster Artists hosted at the Leeds Playhouse Gallery in 1976. Piper's work was among 49 artworks from various artists where he was displayed alongside TP Flanagan, Carolyn Mulholland, Joe McWilliams, Mercy Hunter, Tom Carr and many others.[42]

Piper illustrated Arthur Stringer's 1977 book The Experienced Huntsman.[43]

Piper raised the alarm and then served tea to firefighters in September 1979 after a blaze took hold of a neighbouring property that housed his studio. His studio and works were untouched, and all the occupants of the flat escaped unharmed.[44]

In 1987 the Blackstaff Press produced Piper's Flowers, a limited edition that included five of his Irish orchid paintings, and the following year he received the Beck's bursary for outstanding services to botanical illustration.[39] A Piper self-portrait was amongst 15 new exhibits inaugurated to the National Self Portrait Collection of Ireland in a show at the Kneafsey Gallery, Limerick, in spring 1987.[45]

In 1991 Piper was elected as an Honorary Academician of the Royal Hibernian Academy.[4] In 1996 the Ulster Museum hosted an exhibition of Treasures from the Royal Horticultural Society which included Piper's orchids.[46] In 2002 Piper was elected an Honorary Academician of the Royal Ulster Academy of Arts.[4]

His interests included music, ballet and reading.[39] Piper is a past recipient of the RUA Gold Medal and the James Kennedy Memorial Award for Portraiture at the RHA.[8]

Death and legacy

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Raymond Piper died on 13 July 2007. He was survived by two sisters, a nephew and one niece.[39] Friend and poet Michael Longley delivered the eulogy at Piper's funeral at Roselawn Crematorium in Belfast on 18 July 2007. He penned a poem entitled The Orchid Man specially for the occasion.[47]

His work can be found in the collections of Queen's University, Belfast, Royal Ulster Academy of Arts Diploma Collection,[6] Belfast City Hall, the Ulster Museum, The National Self-Portrait Collection of Ireland,[48] and the National Railway Museum,York.[49]

References

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  1. ^ Anon: Irish Times 21 July 2007 p16
  2. ^ Hackney, P. 2007. Obituary. Irish Naturalists' Journal. 28: 393-394
  3. ^ a b c d Dolman, Bernard (1970). Who's who in art. London: The Art Trade Press Ltd. p. 434. ISBN 0900083026. OCLC 1089596913.
  4. ^ a b c d "Raymond Piper: Remembering one of Northern Ireland's best known artists". Culture Northern Ireland. 2 August 2007. Retrieved 5 March 2021.
  5. ^ "Lord Mayor and artist found much in common". Belfast Telegraph. 3 August 1977. p. 1. Retrieved 5 March 2021.
  6. ^ a b c d e Anglesea, Martyn (2000). Royal Ulster Academy of the Arts Diploma Collection. Belfast, Northern Ireland: Royal Ulster Academy. p. 196. ISBN 0-900903-54-6.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g Hewitt, John (1991). Art in Ulster 1: 1557-1957 (2nd ed.). Belfast: Blackstaff Press. p. 180. ISBN 0856401285.
  8. ^ a b "Shipyard painter's special touch". 20 March 2003. Retrieved 27 February 2021.
  9. ^ Crowther, Peter. 2013. Citizen Science 150 years of the Belfast Naturalists' Field Club. National Museums Northern Ireland. ISBN 090076158X
  10. ^ a b c "He's an expert with a 6B". Belfast Telegraph. 3 September 2021. p. 9. Retrieved 28 February 2021.
  11. ^ a b c d Stewart, Ann M (1997). Irish art societies and sketching clubs: index of exhibitors, 1870-1980, M-Z. Vol. 2. Dublin: Four Courts Press. p. 592.
  12. ^ Brown, J. (1999). Roy McFadden Interviewed. The Irish Review, (24), p.116. doi:10.2307/29735944 via JSTOR
  13. ^ White, W Brownlow (3 September 1964). "Richard Hayward's Munster journey". Belfast Telegraph. p. 8. Retrieved 28 February 2021.
  14. ^ "Hotel stages paintings show". Belfast Telegraph. 13 May 1964. p. 6. Retrieved 28 February 2021.
  15. ^ McIlwaine, Eddie (19 July 1979). "A Piper's-eye view". Belfast Telegraph. p. 3. Retrieved 5 March 2021.
  16. ^ "Belfast artist's scholarship: Paris or Vienna study". Belfast Telegraph. 8 June 1950. p. 5. Retrieved 5 April 2021.
  17. ^ Chichester (8 April 1958). "In three displays". Belfast Telegraph. p. 4. Retrieved 5 March 2021.
  18. ^ "Exhibitions of paintings by Raymond Piper". Belfast Telegraph. 5 May 1953. p. 8. Retrieved 27 January 2021.
  19. ^ Hewitt, (1991), p.143-144
  20. ^ "Sermon is based on Ulsterman's mural". Belfast Telegraph. 31 March 1956. p. 1. Retrieved 5 March 2021.
  21. ^ "Touching up Mission mural -20 years on". Belfast Telegraph. 18 October 1977. p. 10. Retrieved 5 March 2021.
  22. ^ "Raymond Piper at work". Belfast Newsletter. 23 May 1956. p. 5. Retrieved 27 February 2021.
  23. ^ Hewitt, (1991), p.143
  24. ^ "Prime Minister poses for his birthday portrait". Belfast Telegraph. 29 May 1958. p. 1. Retrieved 27 February 2021.
  25. ^ "Piper show is London occasion". Belfast Telegraph. 14 June 1961. p. 3. Retrieved 5 March 2021.
  26. ^ Bowyer, A W (8 September 1962). "Coffee and Raymond Piper". Belfast Telegraph. p. 5. Retrieved 6 March 2021.
  27. ^ Friers, Rowel (11 August 1962). "Selection from Ulster Artists' exhibition". Belfast Telegraph. p. 5. Retrieved 6 March 2021.
  28. ^ "Artist loses colour record". Belfast Telegraph. 21 September 1962. p. 8. Retrieved 5 April 2021.
  29. ^ "Norfolk Broads". Artuk.org. Retrieved 6 April 2021.
  30. ^ "Artists receive certificates". Belfast Telegraph. 23 September 1964. p. 14. Retrieved 27 February 2021.
  31. ^ Bowyer, A W (1 August 1964). "The flair of Liam Andrews". Belfast Telegraph. p. 3. Retrieved 6 March 2021.
  32. ^ McKenzie, Graham (1 August 1964). "Rolling Stones' Belfast show is a 'real knock-out'". Belfast Telegraph. p. 3. Retrieved 6 March 2021.
  33. ^ "Paintings on show at Inn". Belfast Telegraph. 23 September 1964. p. 3. Retrieved 28 February 2021.
  34. ^ "Belfast artist holds show in Dublin". Belfast Telegraph. 23 February 1965. p. 8. Retrieved 28 February 2021.
  35. ^ Nelson, Charles E (1997). The Burren (2nd ed.). Dublin: Samton. p. 175. ISBN 978-1-898706-10-6.
  36. ^ Best Sellers 15-02-1968: Vol 27 Iss 22. University of Scranton. 15 February 1968.
  37. ^ Chicester (20 September 1972). "Portrait of an orchid". Belfast Telegraph. p. 8. Retrieved 5 March 2021.
  38. ^ "The Governor Lord Grey". Belfast Telegraph. 22 March 1973. p. 23. Retrieved 5 March 2021.
  39. ^ a b c d Clements, Paul (27 September 2007). "Obituary: Raymond Piper". The Guardian. Retrieved 28 February 2021.
  40. ^ "Mercy Hunter elected". Belfast Telegraph. 6 December 1975. p. 5. Retrieved 22 January 2021.
  41. ^ "The drawing power of Piper: working wonders in the wings". Belfast Telegraph. 24 March 1977. p. 13. Retrieved 5 March 2021.
  42. ^ "Mrs Rees view of Ulster". Belfast Telegraph. 14 September 1976. p. 3. Retrieved 20 March 2021.
  43. ^ MacNeice, Louis (1990). Heuser, Alan (ed.). Selected prose of Louis MacNeice: 1907-1963. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 174. ISBN 0-19-818525-1. OCLC 20633183.
  44. ^ "Five flee bedroom blaze at flat". Belfast Telegraph. 27 September 1979. p. 1. Retrieved 5 March 2021.
  45. ^ Fallon, Brian (6 May 1987). "Faces in the crowd". Irish Times. p. 8. Retrieved 8 April 2021.
  46. ^ "Events". Evening Herald. 30 September 1996. p. 23. Retrieved 6 March 2021.
  47. ^ Longley, Michael (2007). "The Orchid Man". Irish Pages. 4 (2): 165–167. ISSN 1477-6162. JSTOR 25469766.
  48. ^ Finlay, Sarah (1989). The National Self-Portrait Collection of Ireland Volume 1 1979-1989. Limerick, Ireland: Limerick University Press. p. 224. ISBN 0-9503427-7-7.
  49. ^ "Piper, Raymond, 1923–2007 | Art UK". artuk.org. Retrieved 6 April 2021.
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