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Bevis Hillier

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Bevis Hillier
Born (1940-03-28) 28 March 1940 (age 84)
Occupation(s)Art historian, author and journalist

Bevis Hillier (born 28 March 1940) is an English art historian, author and journalist. He has written on Art Deco, and also a biography of Sir John Betjeman.

Life and work

Hillier was born in Redhill, Surrey, where the family lived at 27, Whitepost Hill.[1] His father was Jack Hillier, an authority and author on Japanese art; his mother, Mary Louise (née Palmer), was an authority on wax dolls and automata.[2] Hillier was educated at Reigate Grammar School and Magdalen College, Oxford, where he won the Gladstone Memorial Prize for History. He was employed as a journalist on The Times from 1963 (on the editorial staff until 1968; edited The Connoisseur magazine (1972-76); antiques correspondent of The Times from 1970 to 1984; deputy literary editor from 1981 to 1984). From 1984 to 1988, he was an associate editor of the Los Angeles Times.[3] He has since been a reviewer for The Spectator.

Hillier joined the English Ceramic Circle, aged 17, in 1958. In his over 50 years as a member, he has read the Circle a number of ground-breaking papers.

His first written work appeared in mainstream bookshops when he was still a schoolboy - an essay in The Connoisseur Yearbook 1959. It was on an 18th-century Staffordshire potter, John Turner, who was also the subject of Hillier's first book proper in 1965. In 1968 he published Pottery and Porcelain 1700-1914: a Social History. It was praised in The Times by the historian, J H Plumb.

In 1968 Hillier's book Art Deco of the 20s and 30s was published by Studio Vista. This was the first major work on a hitherto neglected genre of art that had previously been referred to as Art Moderne (the term Art Moderne has since come to be used to refer to the later streamlined style of Art Deco in the 1930s). Hillier's use of the term Art Deco became definitive. In 1971 Hillier curated a major Art Deco show at the Minneapolis Institute of Arts, which helped to increase popular awareness of this style.

In 1970 Studio Vista published Hillier's Cartoons and Caricatures, a study of caricature from the 13th century to the late 20th. Hillier has also written books on posters, as well as The Style of the Century (1983), a review of the various styles of art in the 20th century, from Art Nouveau through psychedelia and pop art to punk.

Hillier's major work, however, is the authorised biography of Sir John Betjeman. It took Hillier 28 years to research and write, and was published by John Murray in three volumes (1988, 2002 and 2004). A one-volume abridgement was published in 2006 for Betjeman's centenary. Hillier was President of the Betjeman Society from 2006 to 2020.

From the age of 60, Hillier has resided at the almshouse of the Hospital of St Cross in Winchester, Hampshire, having an appreciation for the architecture reminiscent of his time at Oxford.[4]

Betjeman letter hoax

In August 2006 a rival biography of Betjeman was published by A. N. Wilson. It was later discovered to contain a hoax letter, purportedly by Betjeman, but actually containing an acrostic insulting Wilson. The letter had been sent to Wilson by "Eve de Harben", an anagram of "Ever been had?", and the first letters of each sentence, beginning with the second sentence, spelled out the message "A. N. Wilson is a shit." Hillier was an immediate suspect for the literary forgery: the Sunday Times article revealing the hoax was accompanied by a prominent picture of Hillier and noted that an envelope containing a letter supposedly from de Harben to the newspaper had been bought in Winchester, his home town.[5] Hillier initially denied responsibility, but soon admitted that he had written the letter. He explained that he had been angered by Wilson's negative review of the second volume of his biography of Betjeman, and by pre-publication publicity for Wilson's own biography.[6]

Bibliography

Books

  • Art Deco of the 20s and 30s (Studio Vista/Dutton Picturebacks, 1968) ISBN 978-0-289-27788-1
  • Pottery and Porcelain 1700–1914: England, Europe and North America (series The Social History of the Decorative Arts), 1968, Weidenfeld & Nicolson, ISBN 0297176684
  • Posters (Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1969) ISBN 978-0-297-17934-4
  • 100 Years of Posters (Pall Mall Press, 1972) ISBN 0269028382
  • Victorian Studio Photographs: Unique Portraits of the Makers of the High Victorian Age. From the Collections of Studio Bassano and Elliott & Fry, London (Ash & Grant, 1975) ISBN 978-0-904-06903-7
  • The Decorative Arts of the Forties and Fifties: Austerity/Binge (Clarkson N. Potter, 1975) ISBN 0-517-518503
  • Travel Posters (Phaidon, 1976) ISBN 978-0-714-81623-4
  • Bevis Hillier's Pocket Guide to Antiques (Mitchell Beazley, 1981) ISBN 0-855-333170
  • John Betjeman: A Life in Pictures (John Murray, 1984) ISBN 0-719-541816
  • Young Betjeman (John Murray, 1988) ISBN 0-719-545315
  • John Betjeman: New Fame, New Love, 1934–1958 (John Murray, 2002) ISBN 0-719-550025
  • Betjeman: The Bonus of Laughter (John Murray, 2004) ISBN 0-719-564956
  • The Virgin's Baby: The Battle of the Ampthill Succession (Hopcyn Press, 2013) ISBN 978-0-957-29776-0

Articles

References

  1. ^ Writers' Directory, 1980–1982, Macmillan Press, 1979, p. 571
  2. ^ The International Who's Who, 63rd edition, Europa Publications, 2000, p. 687
  3. ^ The International Who's Who, 63rd edition, Europa Publications, 2000, p. 687
  4. ^ Country Life, vol. CCXVIII, no. 10, 9 March 2022, p. 74
  5. ^ Brooks, Richard (27 August 2006). "Betjeman love letter is horrid hoax". The Sunday Times. London. Retrieved 28 August 2006.
  6. ^ Brooks, Richard (3 September 2006). "Betjeman biographer confesses to literary hoax". The Sunday Times. London. Retrieved 5 September 2006.
  7. ^ Review of Knox, James (2008). Cartoons and coronets : the genius of Osbert Lancaster. Frances Lincoln..