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{{short description|English painter}}
{{short description|English painter}}
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{{Infobox artist
{{Infobox artist
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| image = File:Bernard-Meninsky-(detail)-1.jpg
| image = File:Bernard-Meninsky-(detail)-1.jpg
| caption = April 1926
| caption = Meninsky in 1926
| birth_name = Bernard Menushkin
| birth_name = Bernard Menushkin
| birth_date = {{birth date|1891|7|28|df=y}}
| birth_date = {{birth date|1891|7|28|df=y}}
| birth_place = Konotop, Tchernigov, Ukraine
| birth_place = [[Konotop]], [[Chernigov Governorate]], [[Russian Empire]]
| death_date = {{death date and age|1950|2|12|1891|7|25|df=y}}
| death_date = {{death date and age|1950|2|12|1891|7|25|df=y}}
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'''Bernard Meninsky''' (25 July 1891 – 12 February 1950) was a figurative artist, painter of figures and landscape in oils, watercolour and gouache, draughtsman and teacher.<ref name=bmLeeds>{{cite web |author=Special Collections, The University Library|url=https://library.leeds.ac.uk/special-collections/collection/97 |title=Bernard Meninsky|access-date=25 May 2017|work=Leeds University}}</ref>
'''Bernard Meninsky''' (25 July 1891–12 February 1950) was a British painter of figures and landscapes in oils, watercolour and gouache, a draughtsman and a teacher.<ref name=bmLeeds>{{cite web |author=Special Collections, The University Library|url=https://library.leeds.ac.uk/special-collections/collection/97 |title=Bernard Meninsky|access-date=25 May 2017|work=Leeds University}}.</ref>


==Biography==
==Biography==
===Early life and education===
===Early life and education===
Meninsky was born in [[Konotop]], Ukraine, where his father was a tailor and the family were Yiddish speaking Russian Jews. They moved to [[Liverpool]] when Bernard was six weeks old. The family name was apparently 'Menushkin'.<ref>John Russell Taylor 'Bernard Meninsky, Redcliffe Press 1990, pages 9-10</ref><ref>In the UK census for 1901 and 1911 the family are called Meninsky and this is the name that Bernard's parents, Isaac and Annie used when applying for UK citizenship in June 1915 ref: Naturalisation Certificates and Declarations, 1870-1916 Ancestry.com. In the 1901 census Bernard is shortened to 'Barney' and he is listed as being born in Liverpool. In the 1911 census, Bernard completes the census form and puts his nationality as 'Russian'. This is consistent with his need to apply for UK nationalisation in 1918. His younger sisters are listed as being born in Liverpool.</ref>
Meninsky was born in [[Konotop]], modern-day Ukraine, where his father was a tailor and the family were Yiddish-speaking Ukrainian Jews. They moved to [[Liverpool]] when Bernard was six weeks old. The family name was apparently 'Menushkin'.<ref>John Russell Taylor, ''Bernard Meninsky'', Redcliffe Press, 1990, pp. 9–10.</ref><ref>In the UK census for 1901 and 1911 the family are called Meninsky, and this is the name that Bernard's parents, Isaac and Annie, used when applying for UK citizenship in June 1915 ref: 'Naturalisation Certificates and Declarations, 1870–1916', Ancestry.com. In the 1901 census Bernard is shortened to 'Barney' and he is listed as having been born in Liverpool. In the 1911 census, Bernard completes the census form and puts his nationality as 'Russian'. This is consistent with his own need to apply for UK nationalisation, which was granted on 1 July 1918 (''London Gazette'', 2 August 1918, p. 9122). His younger sisters, Katie and Sarah, are listed as having been born in Liverpool.</ref>


Although Meninsky left school at the age of eleven, his talent for art led to the sale of a comic postcard design to Appelbaums.<ref>John Russell Taylor, 1990, page 10</ref> Whilst working as an errand boy during the day, he attended free classes in art in the evenings and this enabled him to gain a place at the Liverpool School of Art. He studied there from 1906-1911, being financed by a succession of scholarships. He attended summer courses at the [[Royal College of Art]] London in August 1909 and August 1910. In 1911 Meninsky won a scholarship to study at the [[Académie Julian]] in Paris for three months.<ref>'He later recalled crying in misery in Paris because he missed his family so much' John Russell Taylor, 1990, page 16</ref>
Although Meninsky left school at the age of eleven, his talent for art was demonstrated by the sale of a drawing to a local comic postcard business.<ref>John Russell Taylor, 1990, p. 10. The business was owned by the Appelbaum family – friends of the Meninskys.</ref> While working as an errand boy during the day, he attended free classes in art in the evenings, and these enabled him to gain a place at the Liverpool School of Art. He studied there from 1906 to 1911, being financed by a succession of scholarships. He attended summer courses at the [[Royal College of Art]], London, in August 1909 and August 1910, and in 1911 he won a scholarship to study at the [[Académie Julian]] in Paris for three months.<ref>'He later recalled crying in misery in Paris because he missed his family so much' John Russell Taylor, 1990, p. 16.</ref>


===The Slade School and after===
===The Slade School and after===
[[File:Meninsky-Two-Women-and-a-Ch.jpg|thumb|left|Black and white reproduction of 'Two Women and a Child' 1913]]
[[File:Meninsky-Two-Women-and-a-Ch.jpg|thumb|left|Black-and-white reproduction of ''Two Women and a Child'', 1913]]
With the support of the Liverpool Jewish community and the Jewish Educational Aid Society (JEAS), Meninsky studied at the [[Slade School of Fine Art]] in London in 1912.<ref>Monica Bohm-Duchen in ''A Singular Vision - drawings and paintings by Bernard Meninsky'', published by University of Liverpool and the Contemporary Art Society, 2001, page 24.</ref> His contemporaries included [[David Bomberg]], [[Isaac Rosenberg]], [[Jacob Kramer]] plus [[William Roberts (painter)|William Roberts]], who would become a life long friend and later a colleague at the [[Central School of Arts and Crafts]]. Another important contact Meninsky made at this time was [[Walter Sickert]] who hosted 'At Homes' for Slade and ex-Slade in his Fitzroy Street studio.<ref>Matthew Sturges 'Walter Sickert - a Life', Harper Perennial, 2005 page 481</ref>
With financial support from the Liverpool Jewish community and the Jewish Educational Aid Society (JEAS), Meninsky studied at the [[Slade School of Fine Art]] in London in 1912.<ref>Monica Bohm-Duchen in ''A Singular Vision: Drawings and Paintings by Bernard Meninsky'', University of Liverpool and the Contemporary Art Society, 2001, p. 24.</ref> His contemporaries there included [[David Bomberg]], [[Isaac Rosenberg]], [[Jacob Kramer]] and [[William Roberts (painter)|William Roberts]]. Roberts would become a lifelong friend and later a colleague at the [[Central School of Arts and Crafts]]. Another important contact Meninsky made at this time was [[Walter Sickert]], who hosted 'at homes' for Slade and ex-Slade students in his Fitzroy Street studio.<ref>Matthew Sturgis, ''Walter Sickert: A Life'', Harper Perennial, 2005, p. 481.</ref>


In the autumn of 1912 [[Roger Fry]]'s Second Post-Impressionist Exhibition opened at the Grafton Galleries, London and was seen by the public as scandalous in its modernism. Meninsky's tutors at the Slade, [[Henry Tonks]] and [[Wilson Steer]], also rejected the cubist work on display at the Grafton.<ref>Anna Gruetzner Robins 'Modern Art in Britain 1910-1914 London: 1997, pgs 64-107</ref> Whilst Bomberg and Roberts would go on to explore their own brand of 'English Cubism' in their immediate post-Slade years, Meninsky 'had been bowled over most completely by the greatness of [[Cezanne]].'<ref>John Russell Taylor, 1990, p.57</ref>
In the autumn of 1912 [[Roger Fry]]'s Second Post-Impressionist Exhibition opened at the Grafton Galleries, London, and was seen by the public as scandalous in its modernism. Meninsky's tutors at the Slade, [[Henry Tonks]] and [[Wilson Steer]], also rejected the cubist work on display at the Grafton.<ref>Anna Gruetzner Robins, ''Modern Art in Britain 1910–1914'', Merrell Holberton, London, 1997, pp. 64–107.</ref> While Bomberg and Roberts would go on to explore their own brand of 'English Cubism' in their immediate post-Slade years, Meninsky's work was less radical – though he had nevertheless 'been bowled over most completely by the greatness of [[Cézanne]]'.<ref>John Russell Taylor, 1990, p.57.</ref>


In 1913 Meninsky left the Slade to work as a 'pupil/teacher' for [[Edward Gordon Craig]] at his theatre school in [[Florence]] for a few months.<ref>John Russsell Taylor, 1990. Page 31</ref> Returning to London, he began teaching life drawing at the [[Central School of Arts and Crafts]].<ref>Backemeyer et al.'Object Lessons: Central Saint Martins Art and Design Archive'. Lund Humphries, London, 1996</ref> The principal of the Central, F.V Burridge, had previously been head of the Liverpool School of Art, when Meninsky had been a prize winning student there. Teaching would be a passion of Meninsky's and his relationship with the Central School would be important to him throughout his life.<ref>John Russell Taylor, 1990, p.33</ref>
In 1913 Meninsky left the Slade to work as a 'pupil/teacher' for [[Edward Gordon Craig]] at his theatre school in [[Florence]]. Unfortunately he found Craig 'an unexpectedly hard and unreasonable task-master'.<ref>John Russsell Taylor, 1990, p. 31.</ref> Returning to London a few months later, he began teaching life drawing at the [[Central School of Arts and Crafts]].<ref>Sylvia Backemeyer et al., ''Object Lessons: Central Saint Martins Art and Design Archive'', Lund Humphries, London, 1996.</ref> The principal of the Central, F. V. Burridge, had been head of the Liverpool School of Art when Meninsky had been a prize-winning student there. Teaching would be a passion of Meninsky's, and his relationship with the Central School would be important to him throughout his life.<ref>John Russell Taylor, 1990, p. 33.</ref>


===World War I===
===World War I===
[[File:The-Arrival-of-a-LeaveTrain.jpg|thumb|right|''The Arrival of a Leave Train, Victoria Station, 1918'']]
In the summer of 1914 Meninsky's work was exhibited in the 'Jewish Section' of 'Twentieth-Century Art - a review of Modern Movements' at the [[Whitechapel Art Gallery]] in London's East-end.<ref>Anna Gruetzner Robins 'Modern Art in Britain 1910-1914', Merrell Holberton, London 1982 Pages 139-144</ref> During World War I Meninsky exhibited with the [[New English Art Club]], The Friday Club and, from November 1916, with [[The London Group]] - an organisation that he would be associated with throughout his career.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.tate.org.uk/art/art-terms/n/new-english-art-club |title=New English Art Club }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.artbiogs.co.uk/2/societies/friday-club | title=Friday Club &#124; Artist Biographies }}</ref><ref>Sarah MacDougall | The Early Years of The London Group, 1913-28 in 'Uproar! The First 50 Years of the London Group 1913-63' edited by Sarah MacDougall and Rachel Stratton, Lund Humphreys, 2013</ref>
In the summer of 1914 Meninsky's work was exhibited in the 'Jewish Section' of 'Twentieth-Century Art: A Review of Modern Movements' at the [[Whitechapel Art Gallery]] in London's East End.<ref>Anna Gruetzner Robins, 1997, pp. 139–44.</ref> During World War I Meninsky exhibited with the [[New English Art Club]], the Friday Club and, from November 1916, with [[the London Group]] an organisation that he would be associated with throughout his career.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.tate.org.uk/art/art-terms/n/new-english-art-club |title=New English Art Club }}.</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.artbiogs.co.uk/2/societies/friday-club |title=Friday Club &#124; Artist Biographies }}</ref><ref>Sarah MacDougall, 'The Early Years of The London Group, 1913–28', in Sarah MacDougall and Rachel Stratton, eds., ''Uproar! The First 50 Years of the London Group 1913-63'', Lund Humphries, 2013.</ref>


Meninsky enlisted as a private in the [[Royal Fusiliers]] in January 1918 and married Margaret O'Connor the same year.<ref> Ancestry.co.uk 'UK, British Army World War I Pension Records 1914-1920’</ref><ref>Marriage of Margaret O’Connor to Bernard Meninsky Jan-Feb-Mar 1918 Marylebone Registry Office ref. Ancestry.co.uk. 'England & Wales, Civil Registration Marriage Index, 1916-2005'</ref>
In the first quarter of 1918 he married Margaret ('Peggy') O'Connor in Marylebone Register Office, and their son David was born later that year.<ref>Ancestry.co.uk, 'England & Wales, Civil Registration Marriage Index, 1916–2005'.</ref><ref>Ancestry.co.uk 'England & Wales, Civil Registration Birth Index, 1916–2007'.</ref>


Meninsky had enlisted as a private in the [[Royal Fusiliers]] in January 1918, and worked in a clerical capacity in the regiment.<ref>Ancestry.co.uk 'UK, British Army World War I Pension Records 1914-1920’.</ref> He applied to be a war artist under the scheme run by the [[British War Memorials Committee]] (BWMC), and was released from military duties for an initial four-month period from May 1918.<ref name="WAAbm">{{cite web|title=War Artists Archive: Meninsky, Bernard |website=Imperial War Museum|url= https://www.iwm.org.uk/collections/item/object/1050000333|access-date=23 November 2022}}</ref> He was discharged from military service in August 1918, due to [[neurasthenia]].<ref>Ancestry.co.uk, 'UK, British Army World War I Pension Records 1914-1920’. John Russell Taylor in ''Bernard Meninsky'', 1990, p. 35, states that Meninsky signed up in 1914 and served till mid-1918, and various online sources refer to him fighting in Palestine; but the British Army Pension Records state that he did not serve overseas and that he was not called up until 1918.</ref> Meninsky completed ''The Arrival of a Leave Train, Victoria Station, 1918'' and at least five other related works before the end of 1918, all of which are now in the [[Imperial War Museum]] collection. ''The Arrival of a Leave Train, Victoria Station, 1918'' wes included in the major exhibition of war art held at the National Gallery, London, in late 1919 and early 1920.<ref>National Gallery, Dec. 1919–Feb. 1920.</ref>
[[File:The-Arrival-of-a-LeaveTrain.jpg|thumb|right|''The Arrival of the Leave Train'' 1918]]
Meninsky worked in a clerical capacity in the Royal Fusiliers and applied to be released from military service to be a war artist, under the scheme run by the [[British War Memorials Committee]], BWMC. He was released for an initial four month period from May 1918.<ref>Imperial War Museum, London. Archive. https://www.iwm.org.uk/collections/item/object/1050000333</ref> Meninsky was discharged from military service, in August 1918, due to [[neurasthenia]].<ref>Ancestry.co.uk 'UK, British Army World War I Pension Records 1914-1920’. n.b. John Russell Taylor in 'Bernard Meninsky',1990, page 35 claims that Meninsky signed up in 1914 till mid 1918.</ref> His son David was born in the summer of 1918.<ref>Ancestry.co.uk 'England & Wales, Civil Registration Birth Index, 1916-2007'.</ref> Meninsky completed the large scale painting ''The Arrival of a Leave Train, Victoria Station, 1918'' for the BWMC and at least five other related works before the end of the year. These works are now in the [[Imperial War Museum]] collection.


===''Mother and Child''===
===''Mother and Child''===
[[File:The Red Hat an oil painting by Bernard Meninsky 1919.jpg|thumb|left|''The Red Hat'' - a portrait of Margaret Meninsky when she was pregnant with their second child, 1919]]
[[File:The Red Hat an oil painting by Bernard Meninsky 1919.jpg|thumb|left|''The Red Hat'' a portrait of Margaret Meninsky when she was pregnant with their second child, 1919]]
After the war ended Meninsky resumed teaching at the Central School and also accepted Walter Sickert’s invitation to take over his life class at the [[Westminster School of Art]].<ref>Matthew Sturgis ''Walter Sickert – A Life'' Harper Perennial, London, 2005, page 504</ref> When it came to light that Meninsky was still on the BWMC ‘contract’ he was required to extend his involvement with the war art scheme for a further period.<ref> Imperial War Museum archive: https://www.iwm.org.uk/collections/item/object/1050000333 </ref>
After the war ended, Meninsky resumed teaching at the Central School and also accepted Walter Sickert’s invitation to take over his life class at the [[Westminster School of Art]].<ref>Matthew Sturgis, 2005, p. 504.</ref> When it came to light that Meninsky was still on the BWMC contract, he was required to extend his involvement with the war artist scheme for a further period.<ref name="WAAbm"/>

In the first few months of his son’s life Meninsky created a portfolio of 28 ‘mother and child’ drawings in a variety of media and the subject became a regular theme throughout his career. When Meninsky was elected to the London Group in 1919, he exhibited an oil painting on the theme at their April 1919exhibition.<ref> The Tenth Exhibition of the London Group 12 April-17 May 1919, The Mansard Gallery at Heals, London. This oil painting ‘Mother and Child’ is thought to be the work in the University of Leeds art collection and is reproduced in 'Uproar! The First 50 Years of the London Group 1913-63' edited by Sarah MacDougall and Rachel Stratton, Lund Humphreys, 2013, page 98</ref>
In the first few months of his son’s life, Meninsky created a portfolio of 28 ‘mother and child’ drawings in a variety of media, and the subject became a regular theme throughout Meninsky's career. When he was elected to the London Group in 1919, he exhibited an oil painting on this subject at their April 1919 exhibition,<ref>The Tenth Exhibition of the London Group, 12 April–17 May 1919, the Mansard Gallery at Heals, London. This oil painting, ''Mother and Child'', is thought to be the work in the University of Leeds art collection and is reproduced in Sarah MacDougall and Rachel Stratton, eds., ''Uproar!'', p. 98.</ref> and an exhibition of 'Maternity and Other Figure Subjects by Bernard Meninsky' was held at the Goupil Gallery, Regent Street, London, in May 1919,<ref>''The Times'', 20 May 1919.</ref> leading to the publication of ''Mother and Child: Twenty-Eight Drawings by Bernard Meninsky'' by the publisher John Lane in the following year.<ref>''Westminster Gazette'', 9 April 1920.</ref>

Margaret (‘Peggy’) Meninsky was pregnant again and their second son, Philip, was born in November 1919.<ref> Ancestry.co.uk: ‘England & Wales, Civil Registration Birth Index, 1916-2007’ shows Philip Meninsky to be registered in Fulham in last quarter of 1919. ‘England and Wales, Death Index, 1989-2021’ clarifies his birth date as 1st November 1919.</ref> In December 1919, Meninsky had his highest profile exhibition when ''The Arrival of a Leave Train, Victoria Station, 1918'' was shown at the National Gallery, London alongside works by other war artists under the BWMC scheme.<ref> National Gallery, Dec 1919 – Feb 1920</ref>

The mother and child drawings had been picked up by the publisher John Lane and in 1920 the book launch of ''Mother and Child: Twenty Eight Drawings by Bernard Meninsky'' was promoted with a solo exhibition of the drawings at the Goupil Gallery, Regents Street, London.<ref> ''Westminster Gazette'' 9 April 1920</ref>


===The end of a marriage===
===The end of a marriage===
[[File:'Still Life' Bernard Meninsky 1921.jpg|thumb|right|''Still Life'' 1921]]
[[File:'Still Life' Bernard Meninsky 1921.jpg|thumb|right|''Still Life'', 1921]]
Shortly after the successful Goupil exhibition Margaret Meninsky walked out on her husband and children.<ref>J.R.Taylor, 1990, p.40</ref> Meninsky acted swiftly to foster his children. David was placed with his sister in Liverpool and the baby, Philip, was placed with a retired nanny in Hertfordshire. This was initially a six month arrangement but was sufficiently satisfactory to be extended for the first 18 years of his life.<ref>Philip Meninsky, 'My Father' in 2001, University of Liverpool, page 15</ref> In the winter of 1922 Meninsky tried to put his personal troubles behind him by means of an extended caravan trip to the South of France with a friend, Stuart Edmonds. The stimulus of the Mediterranean light encouraged Meninsky to work more on landscape painting.<ref>J.R.Taylor, 1990, page 57.</ref> Upon returning to London Meninsky immersed himself in his teaching and took an active organisational role in the London Group that was now headed up by [[Roger Fry]].<ref>Ancestry.co.uk 'London, England, Electoral Registers, 1832-1965' records Meninsky sharing a studio at 18 Fitzroy Street, London in 1921</ref> The 'Bloomsbury artists' [[Vanessa Bell]], [[Duncan Grant]] and Fry dominated the London Group shows of the twenties and to some extent Meninsky's work shares their '[[Post-Impressionism|English Post- Impressionist]]' aesthetic.<ref>Sarah MacDoudall, 'Uproar! the Early years of The London Group, 1913-28' in 'Uproar! The First 50 years of the London Group 1913-63' edited by Sarah MacDougall and Rachel Dickson' Lund Humphries,2013, pages 33-36</ref> Throughout the twenties Meninsky worked in the familiar genres - still life, landscape, the nude - avoiding narrative and focusing on form.<ref>Fry's aesthetic is spelt out in 'Vision and Design', 1920, Chatto and Windus, London.</ref>
In the spring of 1919 Meninsky's wife was pregnant again, and their second son, Philip, was born in November 1919.<ref>At Ancestry.co.uk, ‘England & Wales, Civil Registration Birth Index, 1916-2007’ shows Philip Meninsky's birth to have been registered in Fulham in last quarter of 1919; ‘England and Wales, Death Index, 1989-2021’ clarifies his birth date as 1 November 1919.</ref> When Philip was barely six months old, Margaret Meninsky walked out on her husband and children.<ref>John Russell Taylor, 1990, p. 40.</ref> Meninsky acted swiftly to foster his children. David was placed with Meninsky's sister Katie in Liverpool, and Philip was placed with a retired nanny in Hertfordshire. Philip's placement was initially a six-month arrangement, but it lasted for the first 18 years of his life.<ref>Philip Meninsky, 'My Father', in ''A Singular Vision: Drawings and Paintings by Bernard Meninsky'', p. 15.</ref>
In the winter of 1922 Meninsky tried to put his personal troubles behind him by means of an extended caravan trip to the south of France with a friend, Stuart Edmonds. The stimulus of the Mediterranean light encouraged him to work more on landscape painting.<ref>John Russell Taylor, 1990, p. 57.</ref> Upon returning to London Meninsky immersed himself in his teaching and took an active organisational role in the London Group, which was now headed by [[Roger Fry]].<ref>Ancestry.co.uk 'London, England, Electoral Registers, 1832–1965' records Meninsky sharing a studio at 18 Fitzroy Street, London, in 1921.</ref> The 'Bloomsbury artists' [[Vanessa Bell]], [[Duncan Grant]] and Fry dominated the London Group shows of the 1920s, and to some extent Meninsky's work shares their '[[Post-Impressionism|English Post-Impressionist]]' aesthetic.<ref>Sarah MacDougall, 'The Early Years of The London Group, 1913–28', pp. 33–6.</ref> Throughout the 1920s Meninsky worked in the familiar genres still life, landscape, the nude avoiding narrative and focusing on form.<ref>Fry's aesthetic is spelt out in his ''Vision and Design'', Chatto & Windus, 1920.</ref>

===A new start===
===A new start===
Meninsky visited his son Philip from time to time, sometimes with a female companions.<ref>Philip Meninsky, 'My Father' in 2001, University of Liverpool, page 15</ref> He saw David, in Liverpool, less frequently. Meninsky's biogragher, John Russell Taylor describes him '...as a man and so as a teacher, Meninsky was moody and unpredictable. Often he could be jovial and enthusiastic, but sometimes he could be cruelly dismimissive.'.<ref> J.R.Taylor, 1990 p.54</ref> In 1923 Meninsky was elected to the New English Art Club and he exhibited regularly with them as well as with the London Group. Although his ex-student and laterly friend [[ Morris Kestelman]] described his 'pervasive melancholy' Meninsky could also 'shine in company' and was a 'brilliant conversationalist'. He held his own with intellectual friends such as [[Helen Darbishire]] and [[Emanuel Miller]].<ref> J.R.Taylor, 1990, p.60</ref> In the mid twenties Meninsky arranged for his friend, William Roberts to share the life class with him at the Central School and in this capacity they worked together for the next twenty five years. Meninsky's financial circumstances were similar to the Robertses. Referring back to these times Sarah Roberts (nee Kramer) described the realities of being an artist's wife '....living in poverty, from hand to mouth. Living in a room or rooms, sharing a lavatory with a sink maybe on the landing... People today can't imagine just how poor we were in those days'.<ref> Pauline Pauker 'Sarah: an anecdotal memoir of Sarah Roberts Wife, Model, Muse and Defender of William Roberts R.A.' published by the William Roberts Society, 2012, pages 10-11</ref> The burden placed on artists such as Meninsky struggling to support children was immense. It was difficult to sell work in the post-war economic recession. Meninsky had pledged to repay the loan to the JEAS that now amounted to £80. He was, however, never in a position to repay that loan and his offer of paintings and drawings in compensation was rejected. The debt remained unpaid at his death.<ref>Julia Weiner''Anglo-Jewish Association Review'' (vol.23 1994) quoted in Monica Bohm-Duchen' ''A Singular Vision'', 2001, pages 24-27</ref>
Meninsky visited his son Philip from time to time, sometimes with a female companion.<ref>Philip Meninsky, 'My Father', p. 15.</ref> He saw David, in Liverpool, less frequently. Meninsky's biographer John Russell Taylor writes that 'as a man and so as a teacher, Meninsky was moody and unpredictable. Often he could be jovial and enthusiastic, but sometimes he could be cruelly dismimissive.'<ref>John Russell Taylor, 1990, p. 54.</ref> In 1923 Meninsky was elected to the New English Art Club, and he exhibited regularly with them as well as with the London Group. Although his ex-student and latterly friend [[ Morris Kestelman]] described his 'pervasive melancholy', Meninsky could also 'shine in company' and was a 'brilliant conversationalist', holding his own with intellectual friends such as [[Helen Darbishire]] and [[Emanuel Miller]].<ref>John Russell Taylor, 1990, p. 60.</ref>
In the mid-1920s Meninsky arranged for his friend William Roberts to share his life class duties at the Central School, and in this capacity they worked together for the next 25 years. Meninsky's financial circumstances were similar to those of the Robertses. Referring back to these times, William Roberts's wife, Sarah (née Kramer), described the realities of being an artist's wife, 'living in poverty, from hand to mouth … Living in a room or rooms, sharing a lavatory, with a sink maybe on a landing … "People today can't imagine just how poor we were in those days."'<ref>Pauline Pauker, 'Sarah: An Anecdotal Memoir of Sarah Roberts, Wife, Model, Muse and Defender of William Roberts RA', William Roberts Society, 2012, pp. 10–11.</ref>
The burden placed on artists such as Meninsky struggling to support children was immense. It was difficult to sell work in the post-war economic recession. Meninsky had pledged to repay his Slade loan from the JEAS, which now amounted to £80. He was, however, not in a position to do so, and his offer of paintings and drawings in compensation was rejected. The debt remained unpaid at his death.<ref>Monica Bohm-Duchen, 2001, pp. 24–7.</ref>


[[File:Ballerina Bernard Meninsky 1928.jpg|thumb|left|''Ballerina'' pencil, ink and watercolour 1928]]
[[File:Ballerina Bernard Meninsky 1928.jpg|thumb|left|''Ballerina'', pencil, ink and watercolour, 1928]]


Fortunately Meninsky's exhibiting career was on the up. In 1926 he had two solo shows in London: drawings at the Mayor Gallery and watercolours at Lefevre Gallery and it was also the year he met a young dancer Nora Barczinsky (stage name Nora Edwards). Nora was currently in the chorus of the successful operetta ''[[Rose-Marie]]'' in London's West-end.<ref>J.R.Taylor, 1990, p.60.</ref> The couple's 18 month courtship, as evidenced through poems and love letters, was passionate and romantic.<ref>Tate Gallery Archive 8225 'Letters from BM to Nora Edwards / Nora Meninsky'</ref> Meninsky had a large show of oil paintings, watercolours and drawings at the Collectors Gallery in Manchester in 1927. In November of that year his first wife, now 'Margaret Rendall', died.<ref>deceasedonline.com shows the burial record for 'Margaret Olive Rendall', Brookwood Cemetery burial date, 25 November 1927.</ref> By the end of the year, Nora and Bernard Meninsky were married - they surprised their friends by marrying in a synagogue and they moved to a new flat in [[Abbey Road]], St John's Wood.
Nevertheless, Meninsky's exhibiting career was on the up, and in 1926 he had two solo shows in London: of drawings at the Mayor Gallery and of watercolours at the Lefevre Gallery. It was also in this year that he met a young dancer, Nora Barczinsky (stage name Nora Edwards), who was then in the chorus of the successful operetta ''[[Rose-Marie]]'' in London's West End.<ref>John Russell Taylor, 1990, p. 60.</ref> As evidenced by poems and love letters, the couple's 18-month courtship was passionate and romantic.<ref>Tate Gallery Archive 8225, 'Letters from BM to Nora Edwards / Nora Meninsky'.</ref>
In 1927 Meninsky had a large show of oil paintings, watercolours and drawings at the Collectors Gallery in Manchester. And in November of that year his first wife, now 'Margaret Rendall', died.<ref>deceasedonline.com shows the burial record for 'Margaret Olive Rendall', in Brookwood Cemetery, burial date 25 November 1927.</ref> By the end of the year, Nora and Bernard Meninsky were married they surprised their friends by marrying in a synagogue and they moved to a new flat in [[Abbey Road]], St John's Wood.<ref>Ancestry.co.uk, 'England & Wales, Civil Registration Marriage Index, 1916–2005', date last quarter of 1927. Their address is taken from John Russell Taylor, 1990 p. 62, which gives the marriage date as 21 December 1927.</ref> An exhibition of Meninsky's oil paintings at the St George's Gallery, London, in 1930 was well received.<ref>John Russell Taylor, 1990, p.74.</ref>
<ref> ancestry.co.uk. 'England & Wales, Civil Registration Marriage Index, 1916-2005'. Date last quarter of 1927 . The marriage date 21 December 1927 and their address is taken from J.R.Taylor, 1990 p. 62</ref>


===Difficulties===
===Difficulties===
An exhibition of Meninsky's oil paintings at the St. George's Gallery in London in 1930 was well received.<ref>J.R.Taylor, 1990 p.74</ref> That Meninsky and Nora were both 'strong willed and sometimes stubborn' contributed to a situation whereby the early years of their marriage were temptestuous.<ref>J.R.Taylor, 1990, p.62</ref> His 'obsessive devotion' to his wife manifested itself in jealousies and accusations of infidelity.<ref>Bernard Meninsky Tate Archive 8225: Letters from BM to NM</ref> Meninsky was also suffering from an extreme form of hypochondria, thinking, falsely, that he had throat cancer. Later he felt that his eye-sight was failing and that he would become blind. He was admitted to a private clinic for 'Functional Nervous Disorders' - but worried that he wouldn't be able to keep up the payments.<ref>Bernard Meninsky Tate Archive 8225: Letter dated 31st March 1932 from Cassell Hospital for Functional Nervous Disorders, Swaylands House, Penshurst, Kent</ref> Later he was treated at the Maudsley Hospital for 'agoraphobia, claustrophobia and general depression' with electro-shock treatment and classic Freudian psychoanalysis.<ref> J.R.Taylor, 1990, p.76.</ref> Meninsky responded well to the treatment and by the mid-1930s he was able to return to teaching, had an exhibition of watercolours at Zwemmer's Gallery.
That Meninsky and Nora were both 'strong-willed and sometimes stubborn' contributed to a situation in which the early years of their marriage were tempestuous.<ref>John Russell Taylor, 1990, p. 62.</ref> Meninsky's 'obsessive devotion' to his wife manifested itself in jealousies and accusations of infidelity.<ref>Bernard Meninsky, Tate Archive 8225: Letters from BM to NM.</ref> Meninsky was also suffering from an extreme form of hypochondria, thinking falsely that he had throat cancer. Later he felt that his eyesight was failing and that he would become blind. He was admitted to a private clinic for 'Functional Nervous Disorders' but worried that he would be unable to keep up the payments.<ref>Bernard Meninsky, Tate Archive 8225: Letter dated 31 March 1932 from Cassell Hospital for Functional Nervous Disorders, Swaylands House, Penshurst, Kent.</ref> Later, at the [[Maudsley Hospital]], he was treated with electro-shock treatment and classic Freudian psychoanalysis for 'agoraphobia, claustrophobia and general depression'.<ref>John Russell Taylor, 1990, p. 76.</ref> Meninsky responded well to the treatment, and by the mid-1930s he was able to return to teaching and had an exhibition of watercolours at Zwemmer's Gallery.


===New opportunities and approaches===
===New opportunities and approaches===
In 1935 an opportunity to design the sets and costume for a ballet, ''David'' with the newly formed 'Markova–Dolin Company arose.<ref>J.R.Taylor 1990. p.77</ref>Meninsky explained: 'the work of [[Picasso]], [[Derain]], and [[Matisse]] made me realise the unique opportunities which the theatre can give the painter to express himself on a vast scale in terms of colour or light and shade'<ref>Souvenir programme to ''David'', 1935 quoted in J.R.Taylor 1990, p.77</ref> Meninsky's work of the 30s and 40s is marked by a change of direction. Now his female figures take on monumental dimensions that owe something to Picasso's neoclassical style.<ref>Picasso's neoclassism of the 1920s was inspired by studying classical sculpture in Italy</ref> For three of the winter months of 1935/6 Meninsky travelled to [[Torremolinos]] and [[Malaga]]<ref> Picasso's birthplace</ref> in Spain funded by a grant from the Artists' Benevolent Society.<ref>Tate Gallery Archive 806/1/628-629 two letters from Bernard Meninsky to James Bolivar Manson of the Artists' Benevolent Society,1935 & 1936 </ref>
In 1935 an opportunity arose to design the sets and costume for a ballet, ''David'', with the newly formed Markova–Dolin Company.<ref>John Russell Taylor, 1990, p. 77.</ref> Meninsky explained that 'the work of [[Picasso]], [[Derain]], and [[Matisse]] made me realise the unique opportunities which the theatre can give the painter to express himself on a vast scale in terms of colour or light and shade.'<ref>Souvenir programme to ''David'', 1935, quoted in John Russell Taylor, 1990, p.77.</ref> Meninsky's work of the 1930s and '40s is marked by a change of direction. Now his female figures take on a monumentality that owes something to Picasso's neoclassical style.<ref>Picasso's neoclassism of the 1920s was inspired by studying classical sculpture in Italy.</ref> For three of the winter months of 1935/6 Meninsky travelled to [[Torremolinos]] and [[Malaga]]<ref>Picasso's birthplace.</ref> in Spain, funded by a grant from the Artists' Benevolent Society.<ref>Tate Gallery Archive 806/1/628–629, two letters from Bernard Meninsky to James Bolivar Manson of the Artists' Benevolent Society, 1935 and 1936.</ref>


Meninsky's finances became a little more secure in the pre-war thirties. [[Edward Marsh (polymath)|Edward Marsh]], for many years [[Winston Churchill]]'s secretary, bought some Meninsky drawings for himself and also on behalf of his friend [[Ivor Novello]]. Through Marsh, Meninsky met Churchill and in the years following the war he would occasionally drop into Meninsky's studio for lessons. Another important patron in the late 30s was Lord Glenconnor who greatly admired Meninsky's work. As well as befriending the Meninskys he offered practical financial help by setting up a £100 a year allowance for Meninsky.<ref> J.R.Taylor, 1990, p.79</ref>
Meninsky's finances became a little more secure in the pre-war 1930s. [[Edward Marsh (polymath)|Edward Marsh]] for many years [[Winston Churchill]]'s secretary bought some Meninsky drawings for himself and also on behalf of his friend [[Ivor Novello]]. Through Marsh, Meninsky met Churchill, who in the years following World War II would occasionally drop into Meninsky's studio for lessons. Another important patron in the late 1930s was Lord Glenconner, who greatly admired Meninsky's work. As well as befriending the Meninskys, he offered practical financial help by setting up a £100 a year allowance for Meninsky.<ref>John Russell Taylor, 1990, p. 79.</ref>


===World War II and later===
===World War II and later===
[[File:Figures in a Landscape a lithograph by Bernard Meninsky.jpg|thumb|''Figures in a Landscape'' a lithograph with gouache 1946]]
[[File:Flight by Bernard Meninsky.jpg|thumb|''Flight'', gouache, 1947]]

With the outbreak of war in September 1939 the London art schools closed and, following stays with Nora's relatives in the winter of 1939/40, the Meninskys moved to Oxford, where they had a small circle of friends including Helen Darbishire, the artist [[Paul Nash (artist)|Paul Nash]] and his wife Margaret, and William and Sarah Roberts, who had decamped to Oxford at the beginning of the war. Meninsky secured work at the Oxford City School of Art for himself and Roberts. In August 1942 Meninsky was approached by the [[War Artists' Advisory Committee]] to paint a watercolour connected to home-front activity for a fee of 30 guineas, and he later negotiated a further portrait commission.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.iwm.org.uk/collections/item/object/1050000982 | title=Bernard Meninsky }}</ref>


In 1945 he returned to London and to teaching at the Central School. His work moved into what can be seen as a final phase that drew upon the visionary dream worlds of [[William Blake]] and [[Samuel Palmer]] and the pastoral poems of [[John Milton]], whose 'L'Allegro' and 'Il Penseroso' Meninsky was commissioned to illustrate by the publisher Alan Wingate.<ref>Published in 1946.</ref> Taylor summarises the work of this period thus: 'Meninsky's rich-tone landscapes were peopled with mothers and children, family groups travelling (several canvases … inspired by the New Testament story of the Flight into Egypt), pilgrims with staff in hand, shepherds without flocks and heavy-limbed women resting.'<ref>John Russell Taylor, 1990, pp. 82–3.</ref>
With the outbreak of war the London art schools closed and following stays with Nora's relatives in the winter of 1939/40, the Meninskys moved to Oxford where they had a small circle of friends including Helen Darbishire, the artist Paul Nash and his wife Margaret, and William and Sarah Roberts who had decamped to Oxford at the beginning of the war. Meninsky secured work at the Oxford City School of Art for himself and Roberts. In August 1942 Meninsky was approached by the [[War Artists' Advisory Committee]] to paint a watercolour connected to home-front activity for a fee of 30 gns and later negotiated a further portrait commission.<ref>https://www.iwm.org.uk/collections/item/object/1050000982</ref>


[[File:Figures in a Landscape a lithograph by Bernard Meninsky.jpg|thumb|left|''Figures in a Landscape'', a lithograph with gouache, 1946]]
In 1945 he returned to London and to teaching at the Central School. His work moved into what can be seen as a final phase that drew upon the visionary dream worlds of [[William Blake]] and [[Samuel Palmer]] and the pastoral poems of [[John Milton]] whose ''L'Allegro and Il Penseroso'' Meninsky was commissioned to illustrate by the publisher, Alan Wingate.<ref>published in 1946</ref>Taylor summarises thus:'Meninsky's rich-tone landscapes... were peopled with mothers and children, family groups travelling (several...inspired by the New Testament story of the 'Flight into Egypt'), pilgrims with staff in hand, shepherds without flocks and and heavy limbed women resting'<ref>J.R.Taylor 1990, pgs 82-83</ref>


Whilst there was much to celebrate at the end of the war - Meninsky's son [[Philip Meninsky|Philip]] had survived capture by the Japanese being forced to work on the Burma-Thailand Railway and had been interned in POW camps im Malaya and Thailand where, undetected, he made drawings of camp life.<ref>https://www.iwm.org.uk/collections/item/object/80011786</ref> As he approached sixty Meninsky was seen as something of an elder statesman being commissioned by the Arts Council to curate an exhibition ''The Art of Drawing'' in 1948 and a profile article appeared in the first issue of ''Art News and Review''. The magazine enthused: 'Using a palette which owes something to the Fauves, and through them to the Expressionists, he has created a world of classical dignity and plastic form.'<ref>''Art News and Review'', 12 February 1949</ref> There was also a exhibition at Zwemmer's Gallery London. His mental health deteriorated in the last five years of his life and he died by suicide on 12 February 1950.<ref>J.R.Taylor, 1990, p.85</ref>
There was much to celebrate at the end of the war Meninsky's son [[Philip Meninsky|Philip]] had survived capture by the Japanese, being forced to work on the Burma–Thailand Railway and internment in POW camps in Malaya and Thailand, where, undetected, he made drawings of camp life.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.iwm.org.uk/collections/item/object/80011786 | title=Meninsky, Philip (Oral history) }}</ref> As he approached 60, Meninsky was seen as something of an elder statesman. He was commissioned by the Arts Council to curate an exhibition, 'The Art of Drawing', in 1948,<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.tate.org.uk/art/archive/items/tga-8225-3-1-3/meninsky-typescript-entitled-the-art-of-drawing-by-bernard-meninsky | title='Typescript entitled 'THE ART OF DRAWING by BERNARD MENINSKY'', Bernard Meninsky, &#91;1948&#93; – Tate Archive }}</ref> and a profile article on him appeared in the first issue of ''Art News and Review''. The magazine enthused, 'Using a palette which owes something to the Fauves, and through them to the Expressionists, he has created a world of classical dignity and plastic form.'<ref>''Art News and Review'', 12 February 1949.</ref> However, despite these positive events, his mental health had deteriorated in the previous five years, and he died by suicide on 12 February 1950.<ref>John Russell Taylor, 1990, p. 85.</ref>


===Legacy===
===Legacy===
[[File:Portarit of Nora Bernard Meninsky.jpg|thumb|''Portrait of Nora Meninsky'' charcoal, 1944]]
[[File:Portarit of Nora Bernard Meninsky.jpg|thumb|''Portrait of Nora Meninsky'', charcoal, 1944]]


A Meninsky memorial exhibition was organised by the [[Arts Council of Great Britain|Arts Council]] in 1951 and a number of retrospective shows have been staged since including: Adams Gallery (1958);Crestine Gallery, Edinburgh (1965); Boydell Gallery, Liverpool (1966); Tib Lane Gallery, Manchester (1972); Belgrave Gallery London (1976); Annexe Gallery, Wimbledon (1977); Blond Fine Art London (1978); Worthing Art Gallery (1979); Museum of Modern Art Oxford (1981) and 'A Singular Vision' touring exhibition - Liverpool, Leeds, Sheffield, London and Kingston upon Thames (2001) . Nora Meninsky bequeathed her collection of his work to the Contemporary Art Society to distribute to regional galleries in the UK and beyond. 69 works are in UK public collections including with the Arts Council, [[British Museum]], [[Imperial War Museum]], [[National Gallery of Ireland]], [[Tate Gallery]], [[Victoria and Albert Museum]], and regional galleries including Hull, Leeds, Liverpool, Manchester, Nottingham and Sheffield<ref name=bmYP>{{Art UK bio|retrieved=2 December 2013}}</ref>. In 1990 a biography ''Bernard Meninsky'' by John Russell Taylor was published by Redcliffe Press, Bristol. Nora Meninsky bequeathed collections of photographs, letters, documents, sketchbooks, exhibition catalogues and writings to the Tate archive - some of which are digitised. The Imperial War Museum hold letters relating to Meninsky's commissions as a war artist.
A Meninsky memorial exhibition was organised by the [[Arts Council of Great Britain|Arts Council]] in 1951, and a number of retrospective shows have been staged since, by, among others, the Adams Gallery (1958); the Crestine Gallery, Edinburgh (1965); the Boydell Gallery, Liverpool (1966); the Tib Lane Gallery, Manchester (1972); the Belgrave Gallery, London (1976); the Annexe Gallery, Wimbledon (1977); Blond Fine Art, London (1978); Worthing Art Gallery (1979); the Museum of Modern Art, Oxford (1981). In addition the exhibition 'A Singular Vision: Drawings and Paintings by Bernard Meninsky' toured to Liverpool, Leeds, Sheffield, London and Kingston upon Thames in 2001. Nora Meninsky bequeathed her collection of her husband's work to the Contemporary Art Society to distribute to regional galleries in the UK and beyond. Seventy-five of his works are in UK public collections, including those of the Arts Council, the [[British Museum]], the [[Imperial War Museum]], the [[National Gallery of Ireland]], the [[Tate Gallery]], the [[Victoria and Albert Museum]], and regional galleries including those in Hull, Leeds, Liverpool, Manchester, Nottingham and Sheffield.<ref name=bmYP>{{Art UK bio|retrieved=2 December 2013}}.</ref> In 1990 a biography, ''Bernard Meninsky'', by John Russell Taylor was published by Redcliffe Press, Bristol. Nora Meninsky bequeathed collections of photographs, letters, documents, sketchbooks, exhibition catalogues and writings to the Tate archive some of which have been digitised. The Imperial War Museum holds letters relating to Meninsky's commissions as a war artist.


==References==
==References==
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Latest revision as of 12:20, 7 April 2024

Bernard Meninsky
Meninsky in 1926
Born
Bernard Menushkin

(1891-07-28)28 July 1891
Died12 February 1950(1950-02-12) (aged 58)
Education
Known forPainting

Bernard Meninsky (25 July 1891–12 February 1950) was a British painter of figures and landscapes in oils, watercolour and gouache, a draughtsman and a teacher.[1]

Biography[edit]

Early life and education[edit]

Meninsky was born in Konotop, modern-day Ukraine, where his father was a tailor and the family were Yiddish-speaking Ukrainian Jews. They moved to Liverpool when Bernard was six weeks old. The family name was apparently 'Menushkin'.[2][3]

Although Meninsky left school at the age of eleven, his talent for art was demonstrated by the sale of a drawing to a local comic postcard business.[4] While working as an errand boy during the day, he attended free classes in art in the evenings, and these enabled him to gain a place at the Liverpool School of Art. He studied there from 1906 to 1911, being financed by a succession of scholarships. He attended summer courses at the Royal College of Art, London, in August 1909 and August 1910, and in 1911 he won a scholarship to study at the Académie Julian in Paris for three months.[5]

The Slade School and after[edit]

Black-and-white reproduction of Two Women and a Child, 1913

With financial support from the Liverpool Jewish community and the Jewish Educational Aid Society (JEAS), Meninsky studied at the Slade School of Fine Art in London in 1912.[6] His contemporaries there included David Bomberg, Isaac Rosenberg, Jacob Kramer and William Roberts. Roberts would become a lifelong friend and later a colleague at the Central School of Arts and Crafts. Another important contact Meninsky made at this time was Walter Sickert, who hosted 'at homes' for Slade and ex-Slade students in his Fitzroy Street studio.[7]

In the autumn of 1912 Roger Fry's Second Post-Impressionist Exhibition opened at the Grafton Galleries, London, and was seen by the public as scandalous in its modernism. Meninsky's tutors at the Slade, Henry Tonks and Wilson Steer, also rejected the cubist work on display at the Grafton.[8] While Bomberg and Roberts would go on to explore their own brand of 'English Cubism' in their immediate post-Slade years, Meninsky's work was less radical – though he had nevertheless 'been bowled over most completely by the greatness of Cézanne'.[9]

In 1913 Meninsky left the Slade to work as a 'pupil/teacher' for Edward Gordon Craig at his theatre school in Florence. Unfortunately he found Craig 'an unexpectedly hard and unreasonable task-master'.[10] Returning to London a few months later, he began teaching life drawing at the Central School of Arts and Crafts.[11] The principal of the Central, F. V. Burridge, had been head of the Liverpool School of Art when Meninsky had been a prize-winning student there. Teaching would be a passion of Meninsky's, and his relationship with the Central School would be important to him throughout his life.[12]

World War I[edit]

The Arrival of a Leave Train, Victoria Station, 1918

In the summer of 1914 Meninsky's work was exhibited in the 'Jewish Section' of 'Twentieth-Century Art: A Review of Modern Movements' at the Whitechapel Art Gallery in London's East End.[13] During World War I Meninsky exhibited with the New English Art Club, the Friday Club and, from November 1916, with the London Group – an organisation that he would be associated with throughout his career.[14][15][16]

In the first quarter of 1918 he married Margaret ('Peggy') O'Connor in Marylebone Register Office, and their son David was born later that year.[17][18]

Meninsky had enlisted as a private in the Royal Fusiliers in January 1918, and worked in a clerical capacity in the regiment.[19] He applied to be a war artist under the scheme run by the British War Memorials Committee (BWMC), and was released from military duties for an initial four-month period from May 1918.[20] He was discharged from military service in August 1918, due to neurasthenia.[21] Meninsky completed The Arrival of a Leave Train, Victoria Station, 1918 and at least five other related works before the end of 1918, all of which are now in the Imperial War Museum collection. The Arrival of a Leave Train, Victoria Station, 1918 wes included in the major exhibition of war art held at the National Gallery, London, in late 1919 and early 1920.[22]

Mother and Child[edit]

The Red Hat – a portrait of Margaret Meninsky when she was pregnant with their second child, 1919

After the war ended, Meninsky resumed teaching at the Central School and also accepted Walter Sickert’s invitation to take over his life class at the Westminster School of Art.[23] When it came to light that Meninsky was still on the BWMC contract, he was required to extend his involvement with the war artist scheme for a further period.[20]

In the first few months of his son’s life, Meninsky created a portfolio of 28 ‘mother and child’ drawings in a variety of media, and the subject became a regular theme throughout Meninsky's career. When he was elected to the London Group in 1919, he exhibited an oil painting on this subject at their April 1919 exhibition,[24] and an exhibition of 'Maternity and Other Figure Subjects by Bernard Meninsky' was held at the Goupil Gallery, Regent Street, London, in May 1919,[25] leading to the publication of Mother and Child: Twenty-Eight Drawings by Bernard Meninsky by the publisher John Lane in the following year.[26]

The end of a marriage[edit]

Still Life, 1921

In the spring of 1919 Meninsky's wife was pregnant again, and their second son, Philip, was born in November 1919.[27] When Philip was barely six months old, Margaret Meninsky walked out on her husband and children.[28] Meninsky acted swiftly to foster his children. David was placed with Meninsky's sister Katie in Liverpool, and Philip was placed with a retired nanny in Hertfordshire. Philip's placement was initially a six-month arrangement, but it lasted for the first 18 years of his life.[29]

In the winter of 1922 Meninsky tried to put his personal troubles behind him by means of an extended caravan trip to the south of France with a friend, Stuart Edmonds. The stimulus of the Mediterranean light encouraged him to work more on landscape painting.[30] Upon returning to London Meninsky immersed himself in his teaching and took an active organisational role in the London Group, which was now headed by Roger Fry.[31] The 'Bloomsbury artists' Vanessa Bell, Duncan Grant and Fry dominated the London Group shows of the 1920s, and to some extent Meninsky's work shares their 'English Post-Impressionist' aesthetic.[32] Throughout the 1920s Meninsky worked in the familiar genres – still life, landscape, the nude – avoiding narrative and focusing on form.[33]

A new start[edit]

Meninsky visited his son Philip from time to time, sometimes with a female companion.[34] He saw David, in Liverpool, less frequently. Meninsky's biographer John Russell Taylor writes that 'as a man and so as a teacher, Meninsky was moody and unpredictable. Often he could be jovial and enthusiastic, but sometimes he could be cruelly dismimissive.'[35] In 1923 Meninsky was elected to the New English Art Club, and he exhibited regularly with them as well as with the London Group. Although his ex-student and latterly friend Morris Kestelman described his 'pervasive melancholy', Meninsky could also 'shine in company' and was a 'brilliant conversationalist', holding his own with intellectual friends such as Helen Darbishire and Emanuel Miller.[36]

In the mid-1920s Meninsky arranged for his friend William Roberts to share his life class duties at the Central School, and in this capacity they worked together for the next 25 years. Meninsky's financial circumstances were similar to those of the Robertses. Referring back to these times, William Roberts's wife, Sarah (née Kramer), described the realities of being an artist's wife, 'living in poverty, from hand to mouth … Living in a room or rooms, sharing a lavatory, with a sink maybe on a landing … "People today can't imagine just how poor we were in those days."'[37]

The burden placed on artists such as Meninsky struggling to support children was immense. It was difficult to sell work in the post-war economic recession. Meninsky had pledged to repay his Slade loan from the JEAS, which now amounted to £80. He was, however, not in a position to do so, and his offer of paintings and drawings in compensation was rejected. The debt remained unpaid at his death.[38]

Ballerina, pencil, ink and watercolour, 1928

Nevertheless, Meninsky's exhibiting career was on the up, and in 1926 he had two solo shows in London: of drawings at the Mayor Gallery and of watercolours at the Lefevre Gallery. It was also in this year that he met a young dancer, Nora Barczinsky (stage name Nora Edwards), who was then in the chorus of the successful operetta Rose-Marie in London's West End.[39] As evidenced by poems and love letters, the couple's 18-month courtship was passionate and romantic.[40]

In 1927 Meninsky had a large show of oil paintings, watercolours and drawings at the Collectors Gallery in Manchester. And in November of that year his first wife, now 'Margaret Rendall', died.[41] By the end of the year, Nora and Bernard Meninsky were married – they surprised their friends by marrying in a synagogue – and they moved to a new flat in Abbey Road, St John's Wood.[42] An exhibition of Meninsky's oil paintings at the St George's Gallery, London, in 1930 was well received.[43]

Difficulties[edit]

That Meninsky and Nora were both 'strong-willed and sometimes stubborn' contributed to a situation in which the early years of their marriage were tempestuous.[44] Meninsky's 'obsessive devotion' to his wife manifested itself in jealousies and accusations of infidelity.[45] Meninsky was also suffering from an extreme form of hypochondria, thinking – falsely – that he had throat cancer. Later he felt that his eyesight was failing and that he would become blind. He was admitted to a private clinic for 'Functional Nervous Disorders' – but worried that he would be unable to keep up the payments.[46] Later, at the Maudsley Hospital, he was treated with electro-shock treatment and classic Freudian psychoanalysis for 'agoraphobia, claustrophobia and general depression'.[47] Meninsky responded well to the treatment, and by the mid-1930s he was able to return to teaching and had an exhibition of watercolours at Zwemmer's Gallery.

New opportunities and approaches[edit]

In 1935 an opportunity arose to design the sets and costume for a ballet, David, with the newly formed Markova–Dolin Company.[48] Meninsky explained that 'the work of Picasso, Derain, and Matisse made me realise the unique opportunities which the theatre can give the painter to express himself on a vast scale in terms of colour or light and shade.'[49] Meninsky's work of the 1930s and '40s is marked by a change of direction. Now his female figures take on a monumentality that owes something to Picasso's neoclassical style.[50] For three of the winter months of 1935/6 Meninsky travelled to Torremolinos and Malaga[51] in Spain, funded by a grant from the Artists' Benevolent Society.[52]

Meninsky's finances became a little more secure in the pre-war 1930s. Edward Marsh – for many years Winston Churchill's secretary – bought some Meninsky drawings for himself and also on behalf of his friend Ivor Novello. Through Marsh, Meninsky met Churchill, who in the years following World War II would occasionally drop into Meninsky's studio for lessons. Another important patron in the late 1930s was Lord Glenconner, who greatly admired Meninsky's work. As well as befriending the Meninskys, he offered practical financial help by setting up a £100 a year allowance for Meninsky.[53]

World War II and later[edit]

Flight, gouache, 1947

With the outbreak of war in September 1939 the London art schools closed and, following stays with Nora's relatives in the winter of 1939/40, the Meninskys moved to Oxford, where they had a small circle of friends including Helen Darbishire, the artist Paul Nash and his wife Margaret, and William and Sarah Roberts, who had decamped to Oxford at the beginning of the war. Meninsky secured work at the Oxford City School of Art for himself and Roberts. In August 1942 Meninsky was approached by the War Artists' Advisory Committee to paint a watercolour connected to home-front activity for a fee of 30 guineas, and he later negotiated a further portrait commission.[54]

In 1945 he returned to London and to teaching at the Central School. His work moved into what can be seen as a final phase that drew upon the visionary dream worlds of William Blake and Samuel Palmer and the pastoral poems of John Milton, whose 'L'Allegro' and 'Il Penseroso' Meninsky was commissioned to illustrate by the publisher Alan Wingate.[55] Taylor summarises the work of this period thus: 'Meninsky's rich-tone landscapes … were peopled with mothers and children, family groups travelling (several canvases … inspired by the New Testament story of the Flight into Egypt), pilgrims with staff in hand, shepherds without flocks and heavy-limbed women resting.'[56]

Figures in a Landscape, a lithograph with gouache, 1946

There was much to celebrate at the end of the war – Meninsky's son Philip had survived capture by the Japanese, being forced to work on the Burma–Thailand Railway and internment in POW camps in Malaya and Thailand, where, undetected, he made drawings of camp life.[57] As he approached 60, Meninsky was seen as something of an elder statesman. He was commissioned by the Arts Council to curate an exhibition, 'The Art of Drawing', in 1948,[58] and a profile article on him appeared in the first issue of Art News and Review. The magazine enthused, 'Using a palette which owes something to the Fauves, and through them to the Expressionists, he has created a world of classical dignity and plastic form.'[59] However, despite these positive events, his mental health had deteriorated in the previous five years, and he died by suicide on 12 February 1950.[60]

Legacy[edit]

Portrait of Nora Meninsky, charcoal, 1944

A Meninsky memorial exhibition was organised by the Arts Council in 1951, and a number of retrospective shows have been staged since, by, among others, the Adams Gallery (1958); the Crestine Gallery, Edinburgh (1965); the Boydell Gallery, Liverpool (1966); the Tib Lane Gallery, Manchester (1972); the Belgrave Gallery, London (1976); the Annexe Gallery, Wimbledon (1977); Blond Fine Art, London (1978); Worthing Art Gallery (1979); the Museum of Modern Art, Oxford (1981). In addition the exhibition 'A Singular Vision: Drawings and Paintings by Bernard Meninsky' toured to Liverpool, Leeds, Sheffield, London and Kingston upon Thames in 2001. Nora Meninsky bequeathed her collection of her husband's work to the Contemporary Art Society to distribute to regional galleries in the UK and beyond. Seventy-five of his works are in UK public collections, including those of the Arts Council, the British Museum, the Imperial War Museum, the National Gallery of Ireland, the Tate Gallery, the Victoria and Albert Museum, and regional galleries including those in Hull, Leeds, Liverpool, Manchester, Nottingham and Sheffield.[61] In 1990 a biography, Bernard Meninsky, by John Russell Taylor was published by Redcliffe Press, Bristol. Nora Meninsky bequeathed collections of photographs, letters, documents, sketchbooks, exhibition catalogues and writings to the Tate archive – some of which have been digitised. The Imperial War Museum holds letters relating to Meninsky's commissions as a war artist.

References[edit]

  1. ^ Special Collections, The University Library. "Bernard Meninsky". Leeds University. Retrieved 25 May 2017..
  2. ^ John Russell Taylor, Bernard Meninsky, Redcliffe Press, 1990, pp. 9–10.
  3. ^ In the UK census for 1901 and 1911 the family are called Meninsky, and this is the name that Bernard's parents, Isaac and Annie, used when applying for UK citizenship in June 1915 – ref: 'Naturalisation Certificates and Declarations, 1870–1916', Ancestry.com. In the 1901 census Bernard is shortened to 'Barney' and he is listed as having been born in Liverpool. In the 1911 census, Bernard completes the census form and puts his nationality as 'Russian'. This is consistent with his own need to apply for UK nationalisation, which was granted on 1 July 1918 (London Gazette, 2 August 1918, p. 9122). His younger sisters, Katie and Sarah, are listed as having been born in Liverpool.
  4. ^ John Russell Taylor, 1990, p. 10. The business was owned by the Appelbaum family – friends of the Meninskys.
  5. ^ 'He later recalled crying in misery in Paris because he missed his family so much' – John Russell Taylor, 1990, p. 16.
  6. ^ Monica Bohm-Duchen in A Singular Vision: Drawings and Paintings by Bernard Meninsky, University of Liverpool and the Contemporary Art Society, 2001, p. 24.
  7. ^ Matthew Sturgis, Walter Sickert: A Life, Harper Perennial, 2005, p. 481.
  8. ^ Anna Gruetzner Robins, Modern Art in Britain 1910–1914, Merrell Holberton, London, 1997, pp. 64–107.
  9. ^ John Russell Taylor, 1990, p.57.
  10. ^ John Russsell Taylor, 1990, p. 31.
  11. ^ Sylvia Backemeyer et al., Object Lessons: Central Saint Martins Art and Design Archive, Lund Humphries, London, 1996.
  12. ^ John Russell Taylor, 1990, p. 33.
  13. ^ Anna Gruetzner Robins, 1997, pp. 139–44.
  14. ^ "New English Art Club"..
  15. ^ "Friday Club | Artist Biographies".
  16. ^ Sarah MacDougall, 'The Early Years of The London Group, 1913–28', in Sarah MacDougall and Rachel Stratton, eds., Uproar! The First 50 Years of the London Group 1913-63, Lund Humphries, 2013.
  17. ^ Ancestry.co.uk, 'England & Wales, Civil Registration Marriage Index, 1916–2005'.
  18. ^ Ancestry.co.uk 'England & Wales, Civil Registration Birth Index, 1916–2007'.
  19. ^ Ancestry.co.uk 'UK, British Army World War I Pension Records 1914-1920’.
  20. ^ a b "War Artists Archive: Meninsky, Bernard". Imperial War Museum. Retrieved 23 November 2022.
  21. ^ Ancestry.co.uk, 'UK, British Army World War I Pension Records 1914-1920’. John Russell Taylor in Bernard Meninsky, 1990, p. 35, states that Meninsky signed up in 1914 and served till mid-1918, and various online sources refer to him fighting in Palestine; but the British Army Pension Records state that he did not serve overseas and that he was not called up until 1918.
  22. ^ National Gallery, Dec. 1919–Feb. 1920.
  23. ^ Matthew Sturgis, 2005, p. 504.
  24. ^ The Tenth Exhibition of the London Group, 12 April–17 May 1919, the Mansard Gallery at Heals, London. This oil painting, Mother and Child, is thought to be the work in the University of Leeds art collection and is reproduced in Sarah MacDougall and Rachel Stratton, eds., Uproar!, p. 98.
  25. ^ The Times, 20 May 1919.
  26. ^ Westminster Gazette, 9 April 1920.
  27. ^ At Ancestry.co.uk, ‘England & Wales, Civil Registration Birth Index, 1916-2007’ shows Philip Meninsky's birth to have been registered in Fulham in last quarter of 1919; ‘England and Wales, Death Index, 1989-2021’ clarifies his birth date as 1 November 1919.
  28. ^ John Russell Taylor, 1990, p. 40.
  29. ^ Philip Meninsky, 'My Father', in A Singular Vision: Drawings and Paintings by Bernard Meninsky, p. 15.
  30. ^ John Russell Taylor, 1990, p. 57.
  31. ^ Ancestry.co.uk 'London, England, Electoral Registers, 1832–1965' records Meninsky sharing a studio at 18 Fitzroy Street, London, in 1921.
  32. ^ Sarah MacDougall, 'The Early Years of The London Group, 1913–28', pp. 33–6.
  33. ^ Fry's aesthetic is spelt out in his Vision and Design, Chatto & Windus, 1920.
  34. ^ Philip Meninsky, 'My Father', p. 15.
  35. ^ John Russell Taylor, 1990, p. 54.
  36. ^ John Russell Taylor, 1990, p. 60.
  37. ^ Pauline Pauker, 'Sarah: An Anecdotal Memoir of Sarah Roberts, Wife, Model, Muse and Defender of William Roberts RA', William Roberts Society, 2012, pp. 10–11.
  38. ^ Monica Bohm-Duchen, 2001, pp. 24–7.
  39. ^ John Russell Taylor, 1990, p. 60.
  40. ^ Tate Gallery Archive 8225, 'Letters from BM to Nora Edwards / Nora Meninsky'.
  41. ^ deceasedonline.com shows the burial record for 'Margaret Olive Rendall', in Brookwood Cemetery, burial date 25 November 1927.
  42. ^ Ancestry.co.uk, 'England & Wales, Civil Registration Marriage Index, 1916–2005', date last quarter of 1927. Their address is taken from John Russell Taylor, 1990 p. 62, which gives the marriage date as 21 December 1927.
  43. ^ John Russell Taylor, 1990, p.74.
  44. ^ John Russell Taylor, 1990, p. 62.
  45. ^ Bernard Meninsky, Tate Archive 8225: Letters from BM to NM.
  46. ^ Bernard Meninsky, Tate Archive 8225: Letter dated 31 March 1932 from Cassell Hospital for Functional Nervous Disorders, Swaylands House, Penshurst, Kent.
  47. ^ John Russell Taylor, 1990, p. 76.
  48. ^ John Russell Taylor, 1990, p. 77.
  49. ^ Souvenir programme to David, 1935, quoted in John Russell Taylor, 1990, p.77.
  50. ^ Picasso's neoclassism of the 1920s was inspired by studying classical sculpture in Italy.
  51. ^ Picasso's birthplace.
  52. ^ Tate Gallery Archive 806/1/628–629, two letters from Bernard Meninsky to James Bolivar Manson of the Artists' Benevolent Society, 1935 and 1936.
  53. ^ John Russell Taylor, 1990, p. 79.
  54. ^ "Bernard Meninsky".
  55. ^ Published in 1946.
  56. ^ John Russell Taylor, 1990, pp. 82–3.
  57. ^ "Meninsky, Philip (Oral history)".
  58. ^ "'Typescript entitled 'THE ART OF DRAWING by BERNARD MENINSKY, Bernard Meninsky, [1948] – Tate Archive".
  59. ^ Art News and Review, 12 February 1949.
  60. ^ John Russell Taylor, 1990, p. 85.
  61. ^ 75 artworks by or after Bernard Meninsky at the Art UK site. Retrieved 2 December 2013..

External links[edit]