Doris Clare Zinkeisen (Scottish, 1897-1991)

  • Épuisé

Doris Clare Zinkeisen (Scottish, 1897-1991)

Highflyer in Hyde Park

Oil on Canvas

  • Signed lower right.
  • Provenance; with Frost & Reed.  With worn remains of gallery label verso.
  • There are 24 paintings by this artist in the British National Art Collection.
  • Similar listed to £25,000.00 GBP at auction.
  • Painting - 71cm x 91.5cm
  • Frame - 93cm x 111cm 

Notes

A superb example of the work of Doris Zinkeisen depicting an elegant couple riding a highflyer in Hyde Park.  The painting has a good provenance having been with Frost & Reed in the past and with the worn remains of a Frost & Reed gallery label verso.  Signed lower right.

Condition

In very fine condition.  The canvas not lined, torn, patched or repaired.  There is the odd very light surface mark though generally good.  Clean, highly attractive, well framed and ready to hang.

Artist Information

Doris Clare Zinkeisen was a Scottish theatrical stage and costume designer, painter, commercial artist, and writer. She was best known for her work in theatrical design.  Doris Zinkeisen was born in Clynder House in Rosneath, Argyll, Scotland. Her parents were Welsh-born Clare Bolton-Charles and Victor Zinkeisen, a shipper, manufacturer and yarn merchant and amateur artist from Glasgow. Her father was Scottish-born, but both of his parents had emigrated from Altenburg in Thuringia in around 1859 and had settled in Scotland. She had a younger sister, Anna Zinkeisen, who also became an artist. The family left Scotland and moved to Pinner, near Harrow in 1909. Zinkeisen attended the Harrow School of Art for four years and won a scholarship to the Royal Academy Schools in 1917 together with her sister Anna. During World War I Zinkeisen served in a Voluntary Aid Detachment at a hospital in Northwood, Middlesex.  Zinkeisen shared a studio in London with her sister during the 1920s and 1930s from where she embarked on her career as a painter, commercial artist, and theatrical designer.

Zinkeisen's realist style made her popular as a portraitist and she became a well-known society painter. The subject matter of her paintings, society portraiture, equestrian portraiture, and scenes from the parks of London and Paris reflect the lifestyle of the upper class at the time. An early success was her 1925 portrait of the actor Elsa Lanchester.  She also worked widely in other media as an illustrator and commercial artist including producing advertising posters for several British mainline railway companies and murals for the RMS Queen Mary. A 1939 poster for the London Underground, At the Theatre, was printed but never issued due to the start of World War II.  In 1944, Doris and her sister Anna were commissioned by United Steel Companies (USC) to produce twelve paintings that were reproduced in the trade and technical press in Britain, Canada, Australia and South Africa. The images were subsequently collated in a book, This Present Age, published in 1946.

In 1922, while working with Nigel Playfair, Zinkeisen met James Whale. The two were considered a couple for some two years, although later Whale lived in the USA as an openly gay man. The couple was reportedly engaged in 1924 but by 1925 the engagement was off. Zinkeisen married Edward Grahame Johnstone, a naval officer in 1927 and had twin daughters in June 1928, the children's book illustrators Janet and Anne Grahame Johnstone and a son, Murray Johnstone. Zinkeisen was a fine horsewoman and won the Moscow Cup at the International Horse Show in 1934.  Grahame Johnstone died in 1946 and Zinkeisen's twin girls then lived with her, with them all moving to Suffolk in 1966. Zinkeisen outlived her daughter Janet who died in an accident in 1979. Doris Zinkeisen died on 3 January 1991, in Badingham in Suffolk, aged 92.