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Roger Hilton (1911-1975)

Painter, born in Northwood, Middlesex, who studied at the Slade, 1929-31 and again 1935-36, also under Bissière at the Académie Ranson, Paris. In 1936 he held his first solo exhibition at the Bloomsbury Gallery, London. About this time he also showed with the little-known Twenties Group at the Lucy Wertheim Gallery. Joining the army in 1940, he served in the Commandos, and became a prisoner of war after the Dieppe Raid in August 1942. He experimented with ways of depicting forms in space, first displaying them in a illusory space, then as if on thee surface alone, then as if floating in water. He won the 1963 John Moores Painting Prize and was appointed CBE in 1968. He turned to abstract art around 1950, influenced by Tachisme and encouraged by friendship with members of the Cobra Group in particular the Dutch artist Constant Niewenhuis. Hilton travelled to Paris and Amsterdam to study the work of Mondrian and began producing very aus

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Self portrait, mid 1930's
Roger Hilton
Self portrait, mid 1930's  Sold