Sir John Lavery (1856-1941)
Head of a Girl, Hazel
- Year
- 1925
- Size
- Unframed 42 x 31cm; Framed 65.8 x 52.5cm
- Medium
- Charcoal and pastel on paper
- Provenance
- Bequest: Presented by the Artist's daughter Mrs McEnnery
John Lavery born in Belfast into a Catholic family, was orphaned early in life. He moved to Glasgow and worked as a photographer’s assistant, before taking art classes at the Haldene Academy. In 1881 he attended the Academie Julian in Paris, and, on a visit to Grez three years later, was influenced by the work of Frank O'Meara and other 'plein air' painters who worked there. He subsequently painted in Scotland and England as well as Ireland, but his plein air work is mainly associated with France and with Tangiers, where he bought a house. In England, his fashionable portrait practice thrived, particularly after he painted the British royal family in 1913. Lavery was an official war artist for Britain’s Royal Navy during the First World War. He was a highly versatile artist and moved easily in the highest echelons of society, both in Britain and on the Continent.
On a painting trip to Brittany in 1904, Lavery, a widower since 1891, met Hazel Martyn (1887-1935), the daughter of a Chicago industrialist of Irish extraction and married in 1909. Hazel, a beautiful and fashionable woman who herself liked to draw and paint, became Lavery's most frequent sitter.
Hazel Lavery's face became well-known to Irish people because it was her engraved portrait which graced the Irish pound note until the 1970s. The Irish Free State government invited Lavery to paint his wife's portrait for the currency as a token of gratitude for the help he and Hazel - by then Sir John and Lady Lavery - gave to the Irish delegation during the negotiations for the Anglo-Irish Treaty in London in 1921. The Lavery’s lent their splendid house at Cromwell Place in South Kensington to the Irish delegation, led by Michael Collins. It was the acceptance of the terms of that Treaty by Collins and his delegation that led to the subsequent Civil War in Ireland.
By Vera Ryan