Paintings

Leonard Campbell Taylor
English 1874-1969
Ships at Sea
Oil on canvas
18 by 32 in. W/frame 22 ½ by 36 ½ in.


Inventory Number: Art T12
1900-1949 European Marine Period 1900-1949 Seascape

See Artist Bio below.


Leonard Campbell Taylor
English 1874-1969

Taylor was born on 12 December 1874 in Oxford, England. He was the son of James Taylor, organist at New College, Oxford and for the University of Oxford. He studied at the Dragon School preparatory school when it was still located in Crick Road under its first headmaster, Rev. A. E. Clark. He was the second of four brothers at the school, and designed a front cover for the school magazine, The Draconian, in 1900. From 1895 to 1900, he was a student as the Royal Academy School. He went on to study at Cheltenham College with a scholarship and then the Ruskin School in Oxford, before moving on to the St John’s Wood Art School, in London in 1905.

During the First World War, he served as an official war artist. He served with the Surrey Volunteer Regiment from 1916 to 1917; he became a lieutenant with the Royal Navy Volunteer Reserve in 1918. His war art is primarily “documentary” in nature and painstakingly accurate. In 1919, he painted Herculaneum Dock, a depiction of ships in dazzle camouflage at Liverpool’s docks, rendered in accurate detail.

Taylor exhibited primarily in London and Paris, and lived in Suffolk. He first exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1899, and became a full member in 1931.

Museums and Exhibitions:

Birkenhead; Tate Gallery, London; Manchester; Rome

Top