wpad013c7a.png

Mulberry Gallery

QUALITY WORKS OF ART FROM THE TWENTIETH CENTURY

wp21fe6715.png
wp8cc7c97e.png
wpef609697.png
wpf01c1023.png
wp2899d7b8.png
wpd014ccd9.png

William Dring, RA (1904 – 1990)

 

A painter, draughtsman and teacher, he was born Dennis William Dring, but was known colloquially as John. He was the brother of the artist James Dring, he married the painter Grace Elizabeth Rothwell, and their daughter Melissa was also an artist.

 

Dring studied under Henry Tonks at the Slade School of Fine Art, 1922-25, and emerged as a fine draughtsman, a sympathetic portrait painter (fond of using his family as subjects), and a deft watercolourist.

 

He won several prizes and scholarships at the Slade. He then taught until 1940 at Southampton School of Art, and became an official war artist. The Imperial War Museum owns 64 of his portraits in pastel (mainly of naval personnel who received battle awards) and five of his elaborately constructed oil paintings.

 

He was elected an associate of the Royal Academy in 1944 when he showed a strong portrait of his daughter Melissa, and after the war he became a noted exhibitor at the Royal Academy, being elected RA in 1955.

 

He produced a string of boardroom and official portraits, including the presentation of the Freedom of the City of London to the then HRH Princess Elizabeth in 1947. In 1981 he was commissioned to record the five most influential benchers of Lincoln’s Inn: Mrs Thatcher; Lord Denning; Mr Megarry; Lord Hailsham; and Lord Widgery. His work was regularly shown by Agnews. He lived at Compton, near Winchester in Hampshire.

Mulberry Gallery   Email: randssansom@aol.com

William Dring  (1904 - 1990)

"Earring"

40cm x 30cm

Pastel

£450

Earring - by William Dring