Llewelyn Lloyd (Livorno, 1879 - 1949) was a British-Italian painter, belonging to the Postmacchiaioli movement.
Biography
Born to a Welsh merchant working in Livorno, as a boy orphan, Llewelyn came under the care of an uncle. The uncle wished for the young man to study commerce, but instead Llewelyn chose to study (1894-1895) in the studio of Guglielmo Micheli where he met Modigliani, Romiti, Martinelli, and Ghiglia. There he also met Fattori, whom he followed to Florence.[1]
He first exhibited at the 1897 Florentine Promotrice, with "Mattino al Calambrone" (Morning at Calambrone). He began painting sea- and land-scapes using divisionist techniques. He travels to Liguria where he meets the painters, including Lori and Discovolo, that had coalesced around Nomellini and loosely named the Gruppo di Albaro, based on the hillside neighborhood where they worked.
Returning to Florence, in 1907 he exhibited in a hall at the Promotrice Fiorentina, titled the Secessione (Secession), recalling other prior anti-academic movements such as the Vienna Secession. In this hall, Costetti, De Carolis, Ghiglia, and Graziosi shared the walls with Lloyd.
In September 1907 he travels to Elba, and the coasts were subjects of his paintings exhibited esposti in the 1909 Venice Biennale. In 1914, he exhibited at the Roman Secessione along with a coterie of painters calling themselves the Giovine Etruria. In 1919, he publishes his book La pittura dell'Ottocento in Italia.[2]
In 1922, he exhibited at the Fiorentina Primaverile and in 1923 at the Mostra della Corporazione delle Arti Decorative. In 1929 the Italian Navy commissioned portraits of its entire fleet from Lloyd. His works were exhibited in Spain, Portugal, and Tripolitania, and displayed at the 3rd Exhibition of Marine Art held in Rome. From 1931 to 1939 he exhibited a number of times at the Galleria d'Arte in Florence.
Because he had maintained British citizenship, he was arrested and interned in a prisoner camp, first at Fossoli di Carpi, then in Bavaria, until released on the war's end in 1945. Back in Italy, he was hosted by Roberto Papini, who collected his recollections in a semi-autobiographic but posthumous volume titled Tempi Andati (1949).[3][4]
References
Pinacoteca Livorno short biography.
La pittura dell'Ottocento in Italia.
Tempi Andati.
Biography extracted from: La pittura in Italia-l'Ottocento. Electa, Milan, 1992; I Postmacchiaioli. Catalogue from exhibition curated by Raffaele Monti e Giuliano Matteucci. Edizioni De Luca, Rome 1994.Pinacoteca Livorno.
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