Obituary. The Guardian, July 14, 2009. Earl Haig . A painter of renown who struggled to escape from his father's shadow. by Andrew Roth . Dawyck Haig, the second Earl Haig, who has died aged 91,... Read full biography
Obituary. The Guardian, July 14, 2009. Earl Haig . A painter of renown who struggled to escape from his father's shadow. by Andrew Roth . Dawyck Haig, the second Earl Haig, who has died aged 91, spent a lifetime struggling to decide whether he was primarily a fine modern painter or the son of Field... Read full biography
Obituary. The Guardian, July 14, 2009. Earl Haig . A painter of renown who struggled to escape from his father's shadow. by Andrew Roth . Dawyck Haig, the second Earl Haig, who has died aged 91, spent a lifetime struggling to decide whether he was primarily a fine modern painter or the son of Field Marshal Douglas Haig, Britain's commander-in-chief in the first world war. After an early breakdown, his psychoanalyst recommended that Dawyck should concentrate on his painting. This he did, and he... Read full biography
Obituary. The Guardian, July 14, 2009. Earl Haig . A painter of renown who struggled to escape from his father's shadow. by Andrew Roth . Dawyck Haig, the second Earl Haig, who has died aged 91, spent a lifetime struggling to decide whether he was primarily a fine modern painter or the son of Field Marshal Douglas Haig, Britain's commander-in-chief in the first world war. After an early breakdown, his psychoanalyst recommended that Dawyck should concentrate on his painting. This he did, and he began exhibiting soon after the second world war. He had his first London exhibition at the Redfern Gallery in 1949 and at the Scottish Gallery in Edinburgh the same year. It was not until 1956, however, when one of his portraits was sold at auction... Read full biography
Obituary. The Guardian, July 14, 2009. Earl Haig . A painter of renown who struggled to escape from his father's shadow. by Andrew Roth . Dawyck Haig, the second Earl Haig, who has died aged 91, spent a lifetime struggling to decide whether he was primarily a fine modern painter or the son of Field Marshal Douglas Haig, Britain's commander-in-chief in the first world war. After an early breakdown, his psychoanalyst recommended that Dawyck should concentrate on his painting. This he did, and he began exhibiting soon after the second world war. He had his first London exhibition at the Redfern Gallery in 1949 and at the Scottish Gallery in Edinburgh the same year. It was not until 1956, however, when one of his portraits was sold at auction at Christie's along with works by Rubens, Rembrandt, Hogarth and Reynolds, that he really made... Read full biography
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