Roger Fry (1866-1934), Critic and painter
Sitter associated with 17 portraits
Artist of 5 portraits
A specialist in Italian Renaissance art, Fry wrote articles for the Burlington Magazine which he helped find, and until 1910 acted as European adviser to the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York. From 1910 he was closely linked with Bloomsbury. Following the two Post-Impressionism exhibitions he organised in 1910 and 1912-13 he was a leading figure among the avant-garde. In 1913, he founded the Omega workshops, which applied new principles of mass, line, form and colour to the production of furniture, fabrics and jewellery. Active as a painter, he also continued to write, producing eight books in the last ten years of his life, notably Transformations (1927) and Cézanne (1928).
by Roger Fry
oil on canvas, 1894
On display in Room 29 at the National Portrait Gallery
NPG 2447
Bertrand Arthur William Russell, 3rd Earl Russell
by Roger Fry
oil on canvas, circa 1923
NPG 4832
All paintings by this artist on the BBC Your Paintings website
Charleston, Lewes, East Sussex
Fry Art Gallery, Saffron Waldren, Essex
Places
Essex
Sussex







