Johnny Stuart (author)

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John Spencer Innes Stuart, known as Johnny Stuart (20 May 1940 – 12 July 2003), was an author and expert on Russian icons and Russian art who was also known for his interest in the British motorcycling rocker movement and even published a book on the subject. Stuart founded the Russian department at Sotheby's London auction house in 1976, developed it to its leading position in the market and was considered a leading expert in Russian art outside of Russia.[1]

Born to a farmer in Aberdeen on 20 May 1940, Stuart was educated at Eton College, where he studied with Wilfrid Blunt (brother of Anthony Blunt) converted to Russian Orthodoxy at the age of 18 and studied Slavonic Studies at St John's College, Cambridge.[2] He then travelled to the Soviet Union in late 1960s, where his friend and future expert on the Russian avant-garde Camilla Grey introduced him to experts on Russian art. While in the Soviet Union, Stuart studied with the legendary icon painter and restorer, Adolphe Ovtchinikov at the Grabar Art Conservation CentreDom, kotoryi pokinul Dzhon The House that John Left

He co-curated an exhibition of Russian icons – "Gates of Mystery" – at London's Victoria & Albert Museum in 1990, and was an advisor for their 1994 "British Street Style" exhibition to which he loaned items from his collection.

In 1987, Stuart's book Rockers! was first published, a seminal account of the rocker movement. His knowledge of British youth culture made him a guru for actors and pop stars including the Rolling Stones, Oliver Tobias, George Michael, Gary Numan, Billy Idol, Brian Setzer, Paul Simonon and Kylie Minogue, many of whom he befriended.[3] Rockers! at one time "was reputedly the most shop-lifted book in London bookshops".[1]

Bibliography

  • Ikons, Faber & Faber (1975).
  • Russian & Greek Icons: From the Charles Pankow Collection of Russian & Greek Icons, Thirteenth Through the Nineteenth Century. Van Doren Gallery (1982).
  • "Byzantine exhibition at the British Museum provides new insights but falls flat due to missed opportunities" in Art Newspaper (1 February 1995) [1]
  • Rockers!, Plexus, ISBN 0859651258 (1987).
  • St. Petersburg: Portrait of an Imperial City. Vendome (1990).

References

External links