Works

Italy. Mid 1950s

Man on Horse

  • Charcoal on paper
  • 42 x 53 cms
  • 1952

Man on Horse

Signed, dated and inscribed beneath the image

Greaves's most celebrated paintings of the 1950s and their idiom owe much to his years of studying painting at the Royal College from 1948-52. Greaves was taught by Ruskin Spear and, to a lesser extent, by Carel Weight and John Minton, who would draw and paint alongside his students in the life room. Carel Weight was well respected as a serious, exhibiting painter and was helpful in practical ways, offering Greaves free stretchers he did not need. Soon Greaves adopted a way of painting, promoted by the college, 'that showed you were serious': 'one could pick up a range of mannerisms from one's tutors' including John Minton's 'way with Modernism', Rodrigo Moynihan's 'suave portraiture' and Ruskin Spear's 'post-Sickertian dabbing and splodging'. But of all his teachers it was Minton who was of most interest. Greaves respected him principally as a draughtsman, a marvellous, fecund and fluent illustrator, and as a convivial and witty performer, but as a teacher Minton was almost monosyllabic. This was characteristic. Above all, teaching was by example and advice was not necessarily sought, expected or given.

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