The Peter Collymore Gift
Architect Peter Collymore’s generous gift includes works by Pablo Picasso, Paul Nash, Eileen Agar and more, complimenting our existing ‘collection of collections’.
The architect Peter Collymore follows in a tradition of other architects who were passionate art collectors, whose collections have come to us for the benefit of the public.
Peter Collymore MA (Cantab), AADip, RIBA, studied architecture at Cambridge and then at the Architectural Association, London. He was in private practice after working in the USA and taught at the Canterbury School of Architecture. He contributed to a number of architectural journals as well as being author of several books on architecture and the architect Ralph Erskine. As well as designing the Library building for the Britten-Pears Foundation (BPF) on the site of The Red House in Aldeburgh, Suffolk, he also designed the studio for the artist Mary Potter.
As an architect, Collymore was aware of the cross-fertilisation of ideas between Britain and Europe, within not only architecture, but also literature, music and the visual arts. The collection includes drawings, paintings, prints and sculptures by leading Modern British and European artists such as Pablo Picasso, Paul Nash, Eileen Agar, Prunella Clough, John Piper and Georges Rouault. Many of the works have an abstract quality, reflecting a collector drawn to artists with an interest in the relationship of space and form such as Paul Huxley RA, William Crozier, Trevor Bell, Anthony Caro, William Scott and John Wells. Other works have a greater connection to poetry and literature, such as a rare proof of Paul Nash’s ‘Winter Hampden’ and Pablo Picasso’s ‘Vingt Poems de Gongora’.
Simon Martin, Director of Pallant House Gallery writes: “Peter has been a friend of Pallant House Gallery for many years and we are hugely grateful to him for his generous gift, which reflects a lifetime of collecting and complements our existing ‘collection of collections’. His donation enables us to present a richer picture of Modern British art through artists previously not represented in the permanent collection, such as Anthony Hill and Trevor Bell, but also enables a deeper understanding of artists already well-represented such as Paul Nash and Prunella Clough.”
Collymore passed away on 25 March 2019.
Paul Nash, The Quincunx Mystically Considered from Urne Burial (1932)
Paul Nash, The Quincunx Mystically Considered from Urne Burial, 1932, Collotype on paper, Pallant House Gallery, Chichester, The Peter Collymore Gift (2016)
Paul Nash, Winter, Hampden (1921)
Paul Nash, Winter, Hampden, 1921, Wood engraving on paper, Pallant House Gallery, Chichester, The Peter Collymore Gift (2016)