Raoul Millais
Hesketh Raoul Lejarderay Millais | |
---|---|
Born | Horsham, West Sussex, England | 14 October 1901
Died | 24 November 1999 Oxfordshire, England | (aged 98)
Known for | Painting, Illustration, |
Notable work | Black and White Stallions Fighting, Wild Horses, Summer Morning, Greyskin |
Movement | Sporting artist, equestrian artist |
Hesketh Raoul Lejarderay Millais (1901–1999), usually known as Raoul or 'Liony' Millais was a portrait painter, equestrian artist and sportsman. He was the grandson of Sir John Everett Millais and the son of John Guille Millais and from them he inherited both his artistic talent and his love of animals and of hunting.[1]
His father, John Guille Millais, was an artist, soldier, naturalist, hunter, writer and explorer. Raoul followed his father in each of these roles. He is best known for his equestrian paintings and for his Spanish work, created when he accompanied Ernest Hemingway.[2] Like his friend Alfred Munnings, Millais was an opponent of Modernism in art, which he called "the Picasso lark".[2]
He died in 1999 in his 99th year in Oxfordshire, England
He married Elinor Claire (d. 1953), daughter of late Allan Ronald Macdonell, of Montreal. and had a son Hugh Millais
References
- ^ The Independent Obituary of Raoul Millais 23 November 2008
- ^ a b Horsham News
Biography
- Duff Hart-Davis, Raoul Millais: his life and work (1998) ISBN 1-85310-977-0