Not currently on display at the V&A

Painting

1945 (drawn)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

This painting by Albert Houthuesen represents the clown Charles Cameron, and was one of several clown portraits that Houthuesen drew at the Doncaster Theatre in 1945, when the Houthuesens were living temporarily in Tickhill, near Doncaster. According to Houthuesen's biographer, for him the clown became a symbol, inseparable in spirit from an artist and a poet, and many of his works portray the clown as philosopher and saint.

Albert Houthuesen (1903-1979) was born in Amsterdam but came to London with his mother in 1912 after the death of his father. After attending the Royal College of Art, he became a teacher and subsequently a full-time artist. His work covered a wide range of subjects and mediums but he always loved the theatre, dance and clowns, and was inspired to make his first clown drawings in 1944 after meeting the Hermans, a family of Russian Jewish clowns.


Object details

Category
Object type
Materials and techniques
Brush and ink and chalk, possibly with watercolour, on paper.
Brief description
Charles Cameron as Mr. Punch, drawn from life at the Doncaster Theatre, 1945. Portrait by Albert Houthuesen (1903-1979), pencil and crayon.
Physical description
Full-length portrait of the clown Charles Cameron as Mr. Punch-style character wearing a night cap and baggy white trousers, his face in profile with the characteristic Punch-like nose and jutting chin, his hands to his face with palms turned outwards, and one foot in front of the other in a balletic pose. Doncaster Theatre 1945. Signed in ink verso Houthuesen.
Dimensions
  • Height: 50.2cm
  • Width: 35.8cm
Marks and inscriptions
Signed verso 'Houthuesen', and inscribed in pencil verso: 'Charles Cameron - 1945. Doncaster. C.H.' 'do not stick down' (CH were the initials of Catherine Houthuesen, the widow of Albert Houthuesen.)
Credit line
Given by Mrs Catherine Houthuesen
Production
A note in pencil verso by Houthuesen or his widow notes that this was painted at Doncaster Theatre.
Subject depicted
Summary
This painting by Albert Houthuesen represents the clown Charles Cameron, and was one of several clown portraits that Houthuesen drew at the Doncaster Theatre in 1945, when the Houthuesens were living temporarily in Tickhill, near Doncaster. According to Houthuesen's biographer, for him the clown became a symbol, inseparable in spirit from an artist and a poet, and many of his works portray the clown as philosopher and saint.

Albert Houthuesen (1903-1979) was born in Amsterdam but came to London with his mother in 1912 after the death of his father. After attending the Royal College of Art, he became a teacher and subsequently a full-time artist. His work covered a wide range of subjects and mediums but he always loved the theatre, dance and clowns, and was inspired to make his first clown drawings in 1944 after meeting the Hermans, a family of Russian Jewish clowns.
Associated objects
Bibliographic reference
John Rothenstein ‘British Art Since 1900’, 1962. John Rothenstein ‘Albert Houthuesen: An Appreciation’ 1969. John Rothenstein ‘Modern English Painters’ vol 111, 1974. Richard Nathanson ‘Walk To The Moon – The Story of Albert Houthuesen’ 1990. David Buckman ‘Artists In Britain Since 1945’, 2006
Collection
Accession number
S.421-1980

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Record createdAugust 29, 2007
Record URL
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