In Tate Britain
Historic and Modern British Art
In Tate Britain
Biography
Major Sir William Newenham Montague Orpen, (27 November 1878 – 29 September 1931) was an Irish artist who worked mainly in London. Orpen was a fine draughtsman and a popular, commercially successful painter of portraits for the well-to-do in Edwardian society, though many of his most striking paintings are self-portraits.
During World War I, he was the most prolific of the official war artists sent by Britain to the Western Front. There he produced drawings and paintings of ordinary soldiers, dead men, and German prisoners of war, as well as portraits of generals and politicians. Most of these works, 138 in all, he donated to the British government; they are now in the collection of the Imperial War Museum. His connections to the senior ranks of the British Army allowed him to stay in France longer than any of the other official war artists, and although he was made a Knight Commander of the Order of the British Empire in the 1918 Birthday Honours, and also elected a member of the Royal Academy of Arts, his determination to serve as a war artist cost him both his health and his social standing in Britain.
After his early death a number of critics, including other artists, were loudly dismissive of his work, and for many years his paintings were rarely exhibited, a situation that only began to change in the 1980s.
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Read full Wikipedia entryArtworks
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Sir William Orpen The Mirror
1900 -
Sir William Orpen The Angler
c.1912 -
Sir William Orpen The Model
1911 -
Sir William Orpen Lady Orpen
exhibited 1907 -
Sir William Orpen Sir William McCormick
1920 -
Sir William Orpen Dame Madge Kendal
c.1927–8 -
Sir William Orpen Anita
1905 -
Sir William Orpen Zonnebeke
1918
Artist as subject
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Sir Max Beerbohm Bravura: Sir William Orpen
1914 -
Sir Max Beerbohm The New English Art Club
1907