LONDON.- British artist Maeve Gilmore (b.1917; d.1983) is one of the twentieth centurys known unknowns. Although she exhibited during her lifetime, Gilmore was best known for preserving and promoting the legacy of her husband, writer, artist and playwright, Mervyn Peake. However, following Gilmores first institutional exhibition at Studio Voltaire, London in 2022, there is now a long overdue recognition of her work, and she is finally acknowledged as a significant artist in her own right.
This exhibition offers a comprehensive overview spanning nearly 40 years of paintings, works on paper and objects, contextualised with images of her hand painted murals, which once covered the walls of the family home in Drayton Gardens, Chelsea.
By bringing together all aspects of her creative output from home making to art making this exhibition offers an insight into Gilmore as a shrewd and loving observer of domestic life. She took particular delight in the playfulness of her children as they lost themselves in gymnastic stunts, in games of dressing-up, or cats cradle, but did not shy away from darker feelings around the coexistence of her domestic role and her steadfast dedication to making art.
Born in Brixton, Gilmore studied sculpture at Westminster School of Art, London and then at Bonn Art School, Germany. From 1936, she travelled around Europe, witnessing the rise of fascism and Hitlers rallies. Visiting Paris to see the International Paris Exposition, Gilmore was able to see first-hand key works of modernism and the avant-garde. She was greatly inspired by works made and exhibited in 1937, including Alexander Calders Mercury Fountain, Joan Miros large mural Catalan Peasant in Revolt, and Picassos renowned anti-war painting Guernica.
Upon her return to Britain, Gilmore and Peake married, going on to have three children: Sebastian, Fabian and Clare. The family moved to Sark, in the Channel Islands, where Gilmore never ceased to paint. Despite the eternal meals, the fights of ones children, and the constant demands of domesticity, she maintained a studio in her family home throughout the decades. In those attic rooms, she wrote, I entered the world of my own making, and the familiar smell of turpentine.
Gilmores markedly modernist sensibility and Surrealist spirit is expressed through a highly personal set of symbols. Much of her work is autobiographical, depicting daily family life and events from a keenly feminine perspective, in imagery that is often dreamlike. Her painterly world includes the poetry of the everyday, from still lifes of onions, pears and mushrooms to pet cats and her children playing. Gilmores paintings present a carefully constructed interior world, replete with Surrealist imagery as well as portraits of her family, which place domestic scenes centre-stage. For Gilmore, there was never a contradiction between female domesticity and a lifelong commitment to the arts. I have never been able to divorce myself aesthetically, to decide between life and painting
My mainspring has always been the heart and not the head.
This exhibition has been realised in partnership with the Maeve Gilmore Estate and Will Davis. A filmed conversation between Christian Peake (Maeve Gilmores granddaughter) and Rachel Campbell-Johnson, chief art critic at The Times, will be on the gallery website from 14 April 2025.