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In Fraser’s later years, he received many private and public commissions and took part in frequent gallery exhibitions throughout Britain. W.H. Patterson held a two-man exhibition in our Mayfair gallery in March 2000, in which every picture was sold within the first two days
Donald Hamilton Fraser is a highly acclaimed British painter. Fraser dramatised his subjects with bold colours and a confident brush. His work employs a language of visual metaphor in which abstract and descriptive elements combine to express a heightened experience of the subject. His vibrant landscapes and bold still lifes were highly acclaimed during his lifetime and his work was widely exhibited in London, Paris and New York.
Inspired by the Scottish Highlands of his ancestors, Donald Hamilton Fraser depicted this rugged landscape like no other artist. Captured in all its myriad guises, according to the fleeting effects of light and atmosphere, Fraser transformed the Highland landscape into vivid swathes of colour. Fraser was a master at capturing an array of subjects, from the natural landscape to vibrant still lives. He adored the expressive nature of paint and the striking juxtaposition of primary colours, often layering them onto the canvas with a palette knife to produce an almost collage-like effect. Under his deft brush, the tradition of still life painting is distorted to form abstract almost dream-like fields of colour.
Fraser studied at the prestigious St. Martin's School of Art from 1949 to 1952 alongside notable contemporaries including Jack Smith, Leon Kossoff, Frank Auerbach and his close friend Peter Kinley. For many young artists in the early 1950s, they felt a need to become either an abstract or a figurative artist. Fraser did not feel these had to be mutually exclusive, and an exhibition of the work of Nicolas de Staël at Matthiesson's on Bond Street in 1952 acted as catalyst to reconcile these two styles within his work.
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Works
Donald Hamilton Fraser British, 1929-2009
Summer On the Scottish IslesOil on Paper42.5 x 61 cms / 16¾ x 24 inchesSigned 'Fraser' (lower left)Description
Fraser was born in London to Scottish parents. His father was an antiques dealer, and Fraser’s childhood was spent surrounded by beautiful objects and art. Fraser developed a keen interest in literature, reading voraciously and writing poetry, and he began to train as a journalist with Kemsley Newspapers before completing a period of national service in the Royal Air Force in the late 1940s.
Fraser studied at the prestigious St. Martin's School of Art from 1949 to 1952 alongside notable contemporaries including Jack Smith, Leon Kossoff, Frank Auerbach and his close friend Peter Kinley. From 1958 to 1983, Fraser taught at the Royal College of Art, one day a week. During this fellowship, he taught many notable young artists that would go on to be leading figures of their generation, including David Hockney, Ronald Brooks Kitaj, Patrick Caulfield and Thesese Oulton. Fraser became a Fellow of the Royal College of Art in 1970 and was elected as a member of the Royal Academy in 1975. Since this time Fraser undertook work for various committees and organisations connected with art and artists such as the Artists' General Benevolent Institution from 1981 to 1987 and in 1986 he was elected as Vice President of the Royal Overseas League and a member of the Royal Fine Art Commission.4of 4Contact FormSend me more information on Donald Hamilton Fraser