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John Bensusan-Butt

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John Gordon Bensusan-Butt (6 June 1911 – 22 August 1997) was an English landscape painter and author.

The son of Geoffrey C. Butt (later Bensusan-Butt) and his wife Ruth Bensusan, a physician, he was educated at Gresham's School, Magdalen College, Oxford, the Royal College of Art, and the Central School of Art and Crafts.[1]

His aunt Esther Bensusan was the wife of Lucien Pissarro, son of Camille Pissarro, and Bensusan-Butt grew up with their work around him, at the Minories, Colchester, now a museum and art gallery. From 1935, Lucien Pissarro became his adviser and artistic mentor, and the two men worked together at Cotignac and at the Minories, where Pissarro often stayed.[2] Bensusan-Butt exhibited at the Royal Academy[1] and was the art critic of the Essex County Standard from 1950 to 1966.[2]

He died in August 1997, while still living in Colchester.[3]

Selected publications

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  • John Bensusan-Butt, Lucien Pissarro 1863-1944 (London: Anthony d’Offey, 1963)
  • John Bensusan-Butt, The House That Boggis Built: a Social History of the Minories, Colchester (Victor Butte-Lay Trust, 1972)
  • John Bensusan-Butt, The Eragny Press 1894–1914 (Colchester, 1973)
  • John Bensusan-Butt, Recollections of Lucien Pissarro in his seventies (London: 1977)
  • John Bensusan-Butt, On Naturalness in Art (1981) ISBN 978-0950746401
  • John Bensusan-Butt, Colchester People: the John Bensusan Butt biographical dictionary of eighteenth-century Colchester

Notes

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  1. ^ a b "BENSUSAN-BUTT, John Gordon, landscape painter" in Bernard Dolman, ed., Who's Who in Art, Vol. 26 (Art Trade Press, 1994), p. 36
  2. ^ a b "John Bensusan-Butt (1911–1997)", vblfcollection.org.uk, accessed 18 October 2023
  3. ^ The London Gazette, 5 January 1998, L-55005-525