Simon Rollo Gillespie
Simon Gillespie | |
---|---|
Born | Simon Rollo Gillespie 26 May 1955 |
Nationality | British |
Occupation(s) | Art restorer, art historian |
Years active | 1978–present |
Notable credits | |
Website | www |
Simon Rollo Gillespie (born 26 May 1955) is a British conservator-restorer of fine art, and an art historian. He is known particularly for his work with Early British and Tudor portraits, although his practice extends across all periods from early paintings to contemporary artworks.[1] Gillespie has been restoring art since 1978, and he appears frequently on the BBC Four series Britain's Lost Masterpieces, having previously appeared on the BBC1 art programme Fake or Fortune.
Early life
[edit]Gillespie was educated at Milton Abbey School. After an apprenticeship for cabinet maker Martin Dodgsen and a spell as a viticulturalist in Germany, in 1975 he began his business of restoring and exporting vintage cars, moving onto restoring antiques and early English furniture.
After a three-year break travelling to Mexico and founding an English language school, Gillespie returned to the UK and began an apprenticeship in restoration and conservation of fine art paintings. During this time, he completed a chemistry course related to conservation.
Career
[edit]In 1982, Gillespie founded his own restoration studio, Simon Gillespie Ltd.[2] His clients have included international art galleries, major auction houses, private and corporate collections, yacht owners and family offices, as well as museums that do not have their own conservation studios.[3][4]
Since 2016, Gillespie has worked alongside Bendor Grosvenor on the BBC4 programme Britain's Lost Masterpieces. The conservation treatment carried out on paintings as part of this TV programme has resulted in the re-discovery of previously lost or unknown masterpieces, including:
- a mythological scene on panel by Jacob Jordaens;[5]
- a portrait by Allan Ramsay;[6]
- a portrait of George Villiers, 1st Duke of Buckingham, found at Pollok House in Glasgow, Scotland. The painting was thought to be a copy of a portrait by Flemish artist Peter Paul Rubens that had been lost for nearly 400 years, but after restoration, it was found to be the original by Rubens. Its discovery made the news worldwide.[7][8][9]
- a portrait of a young cardinal by Titian in the collection at Petworth House;[10]
- a pastoral scene by studio of Jan Brueghel the Elder and Joos de Momper at Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery;[11]
- a portrait of George Oakley Aldrich by Rome-based fresco and portrait painter Pompeo Batoni;[12] and most recently,
- a Madonna and Child painted in oil on panel from the National Museum Cardiff, long thought to have been an unimportant copy of a book Botticelli by an unknown artist, which after treatment was declared by Laurence Kanter, chief curator of the Yale University Art Gallery and a Botticelli specialist, to be “clearly” from Sandro Botticelli’s studio, with "more than a bit of it" by the master himself.[13]
The most significant discovery arising from Gillespie's work on the show Fake or Fortune? (with Philip Mould and Fiona Bruce) was in 2015, when a Pietà from St John the Baptist's Church, Tunstall in Lancashire was revealed to be by the Italian painter Francesco Montemezzano.[14] Philip Mould said of the result of Gillespie's conservation treatment: “It was an extraordinary transformation and on a scale that is pretty well unmatched."[15]
Involvement in discoveries
[edit]Gillespie has been involved in revealing lost masterpieces by Van Dyck, including Magistrate of Brussels (discovered in 2013),[16] and a portrait of Olivia Porter, lady in-waiting of Queen Henrietta Maria and wife of van Dyck's friend and patron, Endymion Porter.[17][18] Gillespie has also worked on some recent discoveries of paintings that belonged to Henry VIII.[19] In addition, in 2019 his contribution to online debates on the public forum of the Art UK website resulted in a painting at the Walker Art Gallery being confirmed as a portrait by Van Dyck himself.[20][21][22]
In February 2020, Gillespie announced the rediscovery of a lost masterpiece by 17th-century Italian female artist Artemisia Gentileschi.[23][24][25][26] The picture, depicting David with the Head of Goliath and belonging to a private collector who brought it to Gillespie's studio for treatment after purchasing it at auction in December 2018, was published in an article written by Gianni Papi in The Burlington Magazine.[27]
Personal life
[edit]This section of a biography of a living person does not include any references or sources. (February 2023) |
Gillespie married Cristina Rule, and they had three sons. In 2014, Gillespie married Philippa Found.
Filmography
[edit]- Britain's Lost Masterpieces (known as "Art Detectives" in North America), (2016, 2017, 2018, 2019)[28][29]
- Fake or Fortune? A Mystery Old Master (2015)
- Fake or Fortune? Munnings and Churchill (2015)
- Fake or Fortune? Constable (2015)
- Antiques Roadshow Van Dyck, Christmas Special Show
- BBC Culture Show, Your Paintings, Culture Show Special (2011/2012)
Publications
[edit]- Strong, Roy, Sir, ed. (1999). 600 Years of British Painting: The Berger Collection at the Denver Art Museum Paperback (1999). Metaphor Publishing. ISBN 9780965873321.
References
[edit]- ^ "The Contemporary Art Conundrum: Investing in art that wasn't meant to last". Family Office Magazine. 2019.
- ^ Barnett, Laura. "Home is where the art is". Telegraph.co.uk. Retrieved 11 August 2017.
- ^ Seymour, Harry (18 December 2018). "What I've learned: Simon Gillespie, art restorer". Christies.com.
- ^ Mather-Lees, Pandora (2019). "Moving Rare and Precious Art Onboard Superyachts Across Borders". Family Office Magazine: Art & Museum.
- ^ Grosvenor, Bendor (26 September 2016). "New BBC series uncovers a lost masterpiece in Swansea Museum". artuk.org.
- ^ McLaren, Rob (7 October 2016). "18th century art masterpiece discovered in Montrose after being neglected in store room". TheCourier.co.uk.
- ^ Latil, Lucas (27 September 2017). "Un Rubens, perdu depuis 400 ans, aurait été retrouvé en Écosse". Le Figaro.
- ^ Slawson, Nicola (24 September 2017). "Lost Rubens portrait of James I's 'lover' is rediscovered in Glasgow". The Guardian.
- ^ Xinhua (26 September 2017). "Rubens' long-lost masterpiece exhibited in gallery as copy". China Daily.
- ^ National Trust (30 August 2018). "Petworth portrait confirmed as Titian in BBC Four's Britain's Lost Masterpieces". Nationaltrust.org.uk.
- ^ Singh, Anita (6 November 2019). "Lost masterpiece found broken in two in gallery storage, after BBC expert identified it from cow's backsides". The Telegraph.
- ^ Day, Reyhaan (4 December 2019). "Bringing art back to life". The Mayfair Times.
- ^ Brown, Mark (13 November 2019). "Botticelli 'copy' in Welsh museum is genuine, experts say". The Guardian.
Passino, Carla (14 November 2019). "Botticelli 'copy' in a Welsh museum turns out to be the real thing worth tens of millions". Country Life.
Pes, Javier (14 November 2019). "A Museum in Wales Had a Botticelli Right Under Their Noses and Didn't Realize It Until This Helpful TV Art Detective Told Them". Artnet News.
Pryor, Riah (15 November 2019). "Thanks to a doodle, experts now say unattributed painting is by Botticelli". The Art Newspaper.
Salema, Isabel (17 November 2019). "O renascimento de um quadro de Botticelli deve-se a um programa de televisão". Publico.
"Una obra de Botticelli es redescubierta en el Museo Nacional de Gales". El País. 16 November 2019.
"Galles, il Botticelli "riscoperto" dopo un restauro. Era considerato una copia". La Repubblica. 18 November 2019.
Hakoun, Agathe (19 November 2019). "Un tableau de Botticelli redécouvert à Cardiff". Connaissance des Arts.
"Картина из запасников Национального музея Уэльса признана подлинной работой Боттичелли". Polit. 19 November 2019.
Spence, Rachel (20 December 2019). "Masters of surprise — a year of newly discovered art from Botticelli to Bruegel". Financial Times. - ^ "Lancashire church painting is "£100k masterpiece"". BBC News. 20 July 2015.
- ^ Tunningley, Allan (23 July 2015). "Old Master is a £100k dilemma for Lunesdale church". The Westmorland Gazette.
- ^ Burgess, Kaya. "Save my Van Dyck for nation, says priest". The Times. Retrieved 11 August 2017.
- ^ "Art treasure that was hidden beneath years of dirt". Darlington and Stockton Times. 22 March 2013.
- ^ "Van Dyck painting 'found online'". BBC News. 9 March 2013.
- ^ "Article of the Week: The Benefits and Dangers of Art Restoration". Spear's Magazine. 4 December 2012. Retrieved 11 August 2017.
- ^ Brown, Mark (8 October 2019). "Original Van Dyck portrait discovered after online debate". The Guardian.
- ^ Richards, Marion (9 October 2019). "Art Detective uncovers a Van Dyck masterpiece in Liverpool". Artuk.org.
- ^ Brown, Kate (9 October 2019). "Virtuous Online Commenters Have Discovered an Authentic Work by Anthony van Dyck, Britain's First Art Star, Hiding in Plain Sight". Artnet News.
- ^ Gerlis, Melanie (27 February 2020). "The Art Market". The Financial Times.
- ^ Sanderson, David (28 February 2020). "David and Goliath painting revealed as an Artemisia Gentileschi". The Times.
- ^ Moorhead, Joanna (28 February 2020). "Newly attributed Artemisia Gentileschi painting of David and Goliath revealed in London". The Art Newspaper.
- ^ Moorhead, Joanna (29 February 2020). "Artemisia Gentileschi, the baroque #MeToo heroine who avenged her rape through art". The Guardian.
- ^ Papi, Gianni; Gillespie, Simon; Chaplin, Tracey D (2020). "A 'David and Goliath' by Artemisia Gentileschi rediscovered". The Burlington Magazine. 162 (1404): 188–195. Retrieved 1 March 2020.
- ^ "Icon Member to feature in new BBC series on Britain's lost masterpieces". The Institute of Conservation. Retrieved 11 August 2017.
- ^ "BBC Four: Britain's Lost Masterpieces". BBC.co.uk. 2019.