Noel Leaver
Noel Harry Leaver (23 March 1889 – 24 July 1951) was an English painter and teacher.
Early life and training
Leaver was born at the School House in Austwick, North Yorkshire where his father Peter was a teacher.[1] Soon after the family returned to Worsthorne near Burnley in Lancashire. He was educated at St. James School and the Burnley School of Art. He won a National Scholarship to the Royal College of Art at age 16, receiving his full associateship at 21. Towards the end of this time he was awarded a Travelling Scholarship which enabled him to travel to Italy for 6 months (May - October 1911) where he studied painting and architecture. This was followed early the following year with a second travelling scholarship this time awarded by RIBA (Royal Institute of British Architects), the Owen Jones Studentship, which took him back to Italy and from there to North Africa (February - August 1912).[2][3]
Work
Primarily a watercolourist, he was known for hot blue skies, often in contrast with shadowed buildings drawn from experience gained during his travels in Europe and North Africa.[4] Leaver was also known for his paintings of English cathedrals.[2]
He also taught at the Halifax School of Art (1912–15) and then the Burnley School of Art until the mid-1930s.
Sixty-one Noel Leaver watercolours were left to Towneley Hall by the late Dr Peter Bracewell.[3]
References
- ↑ artist page at haynesfineart.com Accessed 2010
- 1 2 Taylor, James S. (1983). Noel H Leaver 1889-1951. Burnley Borough Council.
- 1 2 Taylor, James S.; Kitto, Tony (2009). Noel H. Leaver (1889-1951) The Bracewell Collection. Burnley Borough Council and the Towneley Hall Society.
- ↑ antiquesnews.co.uk Accessed 2010
External links
- noelharryleaver.com - Bio and Gallery