Hermione Hammond

Painting, Visual Artist

1910 – 2005

79

Who was Hermione Hammond?

Hermione Hammond was an English painter who is most famous for her paintings of London damaged by the Blitz during World War II.

Born in Hexham, Northumberland, to an artist mother and an invalid father, Hermione Hammond had one brother and one sister. Rolt was a civil engineer who became a freelance journalist and wrote 26 books, notably engineering textbooks; Rosemary wrote music and assisted the composer Peter Maxwell Davies when he taught at Cirencester Grammar School. She attended the Francis Holland School in London. She went on to study art at the Chelsea Polytechnic, then at the Royal Academy Schools, under Walter Russell and Tom Monnington. She learned mural decoration at the Royal College of Art and attended night classes in etching.

She supported herself by winning prizes and doing odd jobs. One such job was the altarpiece in the ecumenical chapel of Heriot-Watt University, Edinburgh, another was the altarpiece at Marlborough House School, Tenterden. After winning the competition to decorate the ceiling of the new Senate House of London University in 1937 she gained a Rome Scholarship in 1938, but her studies there were cut short by the outbreak of war.

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Born
Aug 11, 1910
Hexham
Nationality
  • United Kingdom
Lived in
  • London
  • Hexham
Died
Jul 29, 2005
London

Submitted
on July 23, 2013

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