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Stuart Sutcliffe Estate

Stuart Sutcliffe Estate

Stuart Sutcliffe Estate

"HOW DO YOU TALK ABOUT AN ARTIST WHO DIED JUST AS HE WAS GETTING READY". ~ Richard Prince.


Stuart Sutcliffe was born in Edinburgh on the 23rd of June 1940, and was raised there until the age of 3- thereafter in England. His father was an engineer officer in the Merchant Navy; his mother was a school teacher. His art career began early on when he created works of art for his Mother's classroom. He attended Prescott Grammar School, and was accepted at age 16 to attend the Liverpool Regional College of Art.


There in 1957, he met fellow art student and musician, John Lennon. He was persuaded by John to buy a bass guitar after the sale of one of his paintings to John Moores - the patron of the Bi-Annual Exhibitions held at the Walker Art Gallery, where the work had been exhibited.


Sutcliffe joined Lennon's band as the "4th" member and changed the name from the Quarrymen to the Beatals. Lennon, always having the last word, changed the spelling to the Beatles. Later Pete Best was recruited just prior to their first Hamburg trip, becoming the "5th Beatle".


From April 1961 to March 1962 he was awarded a scholarship at the chief Hamburg Art School, under Eduardo Paolozzi, who was doing a year as a visiting professor and who is considered one of the fathers of Pop Art. He took a keen interest in Sutcliffe and recalled:


"He had so much energy and was so very inventive. The feeling of potential just splashed out from him. He had the right kind of sensibility and arrogance to succeed." Later he wrote, " My report is that Sutcliffe is very gifted and very intelligent. In the meantime he has become one of my best students."


Stuart fell in love with photographer Astrid Kirchherr and chose to leave the Beatles and devote himself to his work as an artist / painter and continue his studies at the Hamburg State School of Art. In an essay on the artist, Donald Kuspit, noted art critic and Professor of Art and Philosophy at New York University, SUNY said:


"...Stuart Sutcliffe emerged as an Abstract Expressionist painter just when Abstract Expressionism was in decline, but his works return to its origins, epitomizing all that is best in it ... A certain structure is latent in the apparent chaos of Sutcliffe's handling; it is a metaphor for the structured, disciplined self - and he must have had enormous discipline and concentration to produce what he did in such a short amount of time - that Sutcliffe was in the process of realizing when he died."


" He (Stuart) was an outstanding loss to Liverpool and to English painting, and over and above the merit of his pictures he has a special significance as somebody whose burning creativity switched from art into pop music and then back again. He showed the way. " John Willett


He was an artist, poet and writer first and a musician second.


Stuart Sutcliffe died in Hamburg in 1962 from a brain hemorrhage at the age of 21.


3D exhibitions

Stuart Sutcliffe Estate

Stuart Sutcliffe - A Selection of Early and Middle Works

Stuart Sutcliffe Estate

Small Hamburg works-on-paper 1961/62

Stuart Sutcliffe Estate

Stuart Sutcliffe

LIFE STUDIES: Sutcliffe’s model was June Furlong, who, following ten years modelling for many leading modern artists in London, had returned to Liverpool at the same time as Sutcliffe started his course. She has described the environment, arriving back at the college, in the light-filled top floor life studio at Hope Street, where she remembers Sutcliffe rarely without a large folder and drawing board (6). The atmosphere was one of intense study, students working under a strict regime, often having to draw a single pose until mid-afternoon, then another between 4-6pm. Sutcliffe would even return for the evening sessions as well. There was a particular pose that he preferred, Furlong’s favourite in fact: drawn from behind, she stands with her weight on her right leg, hands clasped behind her back. Working in charcoal, chalk, pencil or pen and wash, these robust yet controlled studies demonstrate Sutcliffe’s graphic abilities during his Liverpool training – part of his learning to observe and translate the figure two dimensionally, a necessary skill that allowed him to then experiment with more abstract human forms. Whilst Lennon was more interested in the life model’s anecdotes of a London art scene that included Frank Auerbach, Francis Bacon, Lucien Freud, Leon Kossoff and Carel Weight, Sutcliffe took his time in the life room extremely seriously. Although Lennon, who did not like to be seen as keen to learn, could be a disruptive influence on the class, with his chatter, lateness and musical preoccupations, the life room was a place of focused observation and quiet concentration. Afterhours however, Stuart, John and his then girlfriend, Cynthia (Powel / Lennon) would enter the life-drawing classroom where Stuart would conduct the life-class all over again and instruct John in the rudiments of how to draw the female form.

Stuart Sutcliffe Estate

Selection of Stuart Sutcliffe Artworks 1959-62

Many of the works in this exhibition represent works that Sutcliffe created whilst in Hamburg, Germany. Several of the oils on masonite were created whilst at the Liverpool College of Art. All those represented here have appeared in various catalogues, books and exhibitions since 1964.

Stuart Sutcliffe Estate

Selection of Photographs & Archival Material

Stuart Sutcliffe Estate

South London Art Gallery, 1973 / A Selection of Artworks & Monotypes

Stuart Sutcliffe Estate

Memoir-1

This audiovisual book is a self published work compiled just short of a year before Pauline's passing. She shared a wealth of insightful stories about her conversations with her brother Stuart and the work she and her mother did to preserve his legacy. After her mothers passing in 1983 Pauline took up the mantle singlehandedly with great love and commitment - for 36 years.

Stuart Sutcliffe Estate

Selection of Stuart Sutcliffe Fine Art

latest works

  • Neptune Art Gallery
  • Serendipity II
  • Serendipity I
  • Stuart Sutcliffe

    PWS11 #013/#1946
  • Stuart Sutcliffe

    PWS11 #006
  • Stuart Sutcliffe

    PF12 #002
  • Stuart Sutcliffe

    PF12 #013
  • Stuart Sutcliffe

    PF12 #012
  • Stuart Sutcliffe

    PF12 #007
  • Stuart Sutcliffe

    PF12 #007 B
  • Stuart Sutcliffe

    PF12 #005
  • Stuart Sutcliffe

    PF12 #003
  • Stuart Sutcliffe

    ASTRIDS CHOICE, Untitled, 1961 - 62
    Oil on paper.
    USD
  • Stuart Sutcliffe

    CUSP - Liverpool to Hamburg
    Pencil, ink, Watercolour and wash on paper
    USD
  • Stuart Sutcliffe

    PAULINE'S CHOICE, Untitled, 1961 - 62
    Etched work on paper.
    USD
  • Stuart Sutcliffe

    PF12 #024
  • Stuart Sutcliffe

    PF12 #021
  • Stuart Sutcliffe

    PF12 #019
  • Stuart Sutcliffe

    PWS11 #015
  • Stuart Sutcliffe

    PF12 #036