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Sims
was an accomplished and successful academic painter in oil, tempera
and watercolour, of figure subjects, genre scenes and landscapes.
He studied in London and Paris and exhibited at the Royal Academy
from 1894. He won Gold Medals at the Amsterdam and Pittsburgh International
Exhibitions in 1912, was elected RWS in 1914 and RA in 1916. He was
an official war artist in 1918 and Keeper of the Royal Academy Schools
from 1920-26. In the early 1920's Sims began to show signs of mental
illness, possibly schizophrenia and his pictures became more improvisatory
in execution and revelatory in content. These works, of which The
Prayer is an example, seem suffused with a sense of the numinous;
his figures emanate a spectral light and are contained within glowing
auras. His new mystical paintings were shunned by those who had once
feted and revered him. Increasingly depressed, he went out at dawn
on 13 April 1928 and shot himself at his home in St. Boswells, Scotland.
Sims is considered to be a prime example of the 'trained' artist whose
style changed because of psychiatric illness. which is why he is represented
in the Bethlem Royal Museum and Archive in Beckenham. Kent. |
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