Wellington, Irene
Name Entries
person
Wellington, Irene
Name Components
Name :
Wellington, Irene
Wellington, Irene, 1904-1984
Name Components
Name :
Wellington, Irene, 1904-1984
Genders
Exist Dates
Biographical History
Irene Wellington was born Irene Bass in Lydd, Kent in 1904, where her father was a farmer. She studied art at Maidstone School of Art 1921-1925, and first learnt lettering there under Arthur Sharp. She was introduced to Edward Johnston's Writing, Illuminating and Lettering and in 1925 won a Royal Exhibition scholarship to the Royal College of Art 1925-1930, where Johnston was teaching one day a week. She covered a wide range of subjects, including textile design, embroidery, architecture and printmaking, although she specialised in calligraphy.
In 1929 she was elected a Craft Member of the Society of Scribes and Illuminators. Her first major commission was The Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry Roll of Honour for the First World War that took almost a year to complete. In 1930 she married Jack Sutton and moved to Edinburgh where he was teaching. In 1932 she began teaching writing and illuminating part-time at Edinburgh College of Art. She moved from Edinburgh to London in 1943, leaving her husband Jack Sutton. She then married the painter Hubert Wellington who she had met while he was the Bursar at the RCA almost twenty years previously and they moved into The White House in Henley on Thames. During the next fifteen years she received many commissions, including the Wykehamist Roll of Honour, The Accession and Coronation Addresses presented by the London County Council to Queen Elizabeth II. She contributed towards Alfred Fairbank's A Book of Scripts .
In 1944 she started a part-time job at the Central School of Arts and Crafts, London and taught there until 1959 . The calligraphers Ann Hechle and Donald Jackson were among her students.
After Hubert's death in 1967 she moved to Palace Garden Mews in Kensington where she resumed commissions which had ceased during the 1960's due to Hubert's failing health. There she started her last major piece of work The Bailiffs of Lydd, a commemorative panel which now hangs in the Lydd Guildhall. In 1974 she moved from London to Steep in Hampshire where her stepson Robert Wellington had offered her a home. Two years later she returned to Lydd to share her brother's house, built on a site which once formed part of her father's farm. Despite failing health she continued to work on an oval panel based on a sonnet by Gerard Manley Hopkins but the piece was never finished. She became a Roman Catholic in 1984 and died in the same year.
eng
Latn
External Related CPF
https://viaf.org/viaf/13189505
https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n85372801
https://id.loc.gov/authorities/n85372801
Other Entity IDs (Same As)
Sources
Loading ...
Resource Relations
Loading ...
Internal CPF Relations
Loading ...
Languages Used
Subjects
Calligraphers
Calligraphy
Crafts
Decorative arts England 20th century
Women artists
Nationalities
Activities
Occupations
Legal Statuses
Places
Lydd Kent England
AssociatedPlace
Convention Declarations
<conventionDeclaration><citation>VIAF</citation></conventionDeclaration>