William Scott
Photograph: William Scott and Stanley Jones at the Curwen Studio, 1961*
William Scott was one of the first artists in Britain, along with Patrick Heron, to develop a dialogue with America's Abstract Expressionists and to evolve this influence into an independently British movement. Although born in Scotland in 1913, he is generally held by the Irish to be one of their own, having grown up in Northern Ireland from the age of 9 and having studied at the Belfast School of Art. Scott matured into an internationally famous artist, and at the height of his career he would represent Great Britain at the Venice Biennale.
His early career was varied. Studies at the Royal Academy Schools, of both sculpture and painting, preceded travels, studies, exhibitions and the establishment of an art school in France. World War II forced him to return to England and he joined the Army, becoming a lithographic draughtsman with the Royal Engineers. After the war, he took up the position of Senior Painting Master at the Bath Academy of Art at Corsham Court. His painting, until the early 1950s was realistic in style with a preoccupation for still-life, although this soon changed. Scott travelled frequently to Cornwall where he had become friends with many of the St Ives Group of artists. He, and others from that group, was one of the sixty artists invited by the Arts Council to exhibit as part of the celebrations of the Festival of Britain. Scott’s work moved closer to non-figuration and, in 1953, an extended visit to North America resulted in friendships with New York based artists including Rothko and de Kooning.
By 1956, Scott’s success as an artist, both nationally and internationally, allowed him to give up full-time teaching, although he would remain interested in, and involved with, art school education for the rest of his life. In 1958 he represented Great Britain at the Venice Biennale, one of many occasions on which his work was chosen by the British Council to be exhibited abroad. Major shows followed in London, Tokyo, Paris, São Paulo and Zurich. In 1963 he was invited to take up the offer a 12-month residency in Berlin by the Ford Foundation.
In 1972, the Tate Gallery held a long-expected, major retrospective which cemented his fame.
*This photograph was taken in the original Curwen Studio premises by Michael Peito in 1961. At the time, William Scott (left) was in the midst of proofing ‘Mingulay’ - one of four lithographs commissioned by Timothy Simon – director of the Curwen Press and Studio. The prints were hand drawn by Scott using a combination of stone and zinc plate and were later published in 1962 in editions of 75 copies. The photograph demonstrates Scott’s involvement in the making of the four images, which were to form an important development in his printmaking.
Several rare catalogues and books about William Scott are available for sale in our bookshop.
Public Collections:
William Scott's works are in the collections of the following museums and galleries:
	Australia
	National Gallery of Australia, Canberrra
	National Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney
	National Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide
	National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne
	Queensland Art Gallery, Brisbane
	Western Australia Art Gallery, Perth
	Austria
	Museum Moderner Kunst, Vienna
	Brazil
	Museu de Arte Contemporânea da Universidade de São Paulo / MAC-USP, São Paulo
	Canada
	National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa
	Art Gallery of Ontario,Toronto
	Beaverbrook Art Gallery, New Brunswick
	Museum London, London
	Finland
	Sara Hildén Art Museum, Särkänniemi
	France
	Musée Nationale d’Art Moderne, Paris
	Germany
	Kunsthalle, Hamburg
	Neue Nationalgalerie - Staatliche Museen zu Berlin
	Ireland
	Hugh Lane Municipal Gallery of Modern Art, Dublin
	Irish Museum of Modern Art, Dublin
	National Gallery of Ireland, Dublin
	Trinity College, Dublin
	Italy
	Galleria d’Arte Moderna, Genoa
	Galleria Nationale d’Arte Moderna, Rome
	Galleria Civica di Arte Moderna e Contemporanea, Turin
	United Kingdom
	Aberdeen Art Gallery and Museums
	Abbot Hall Art Gallery, Kendal
	Arts Council of Great Britain, London
	Arts Council of Northern Ireland
	Belfast Education and Library Board, Northern Ireland
	Birmingham City Museum and Art Gallery
	Bishop Otter College, Chichester
	Brighton Museum and Art Gallery
	Bristol's City Art Gallery
	British Council, London
	British Museum, London
	Ferens Art Gallery, Kingston-upon-Hull
	Fermanagh County Museum, Enniskillen
	Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge
	Hatton Gallery, Newcastle-upon-Tyne
	Imperial War Museum, London
	Kettle’s Yard, University of Cambridge
	Leeds City Art Gallery
	Leicestershire County Council
	McManus Galleries and Museum, Dundee
	National Museum Liverpool (The Walker)
	National Museum of Wales, Cardiff
	Nottingham Castle Museum and Art Gallery
	Pallant House Gallery, Chichester
	Royal Albert Memorial Museum, Exeter
	Royal College of Art, London
	Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art, Edinburgh
	Sheffield City Art Galleries
	Southampton City Art Gallery
	Tate Gallery, London
	Victoria and Albert Museum, London
	Wakefield City Art Gallery
	Whitworth Art Gallery, Manchester
	Ulster Museum, Belfast
	United States of America
	Albright-Knox Art Gallery, Buffalo, NY
	Baltimore Museum of Art, Maryland
	Carnegie Institute, Pittsburgh
	Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Smithsonian Institution, Washington DC
	Houston Museum of Fine Arts, Texas
	Museum of Modern Art, New York
	Phoenix Art Museum, Arizona
	Rhode Island School of Design Museum of Art, Rhode Island
	Santa Barbara Museum of Art, California
	Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York
	The Brooklyn Museum, New York
	The Phillips Collection, Washington D.C.
	Toledo Museum of Art, Ohio
	University of Buffalo, Anderson Gallery, NY
	University of Michigan Museum of Art, Michigan
 
           
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
        