Stage designer and painter, born in London, where he died. In 1925 joined St John’s Wood Art School, where he remained two years, then won five-year scholarship to Royal Academy Schools. His early professional work involved murals in his father’s house and decorative schemes for a firm of brewers in their public bars. Then painted landscapes in Britain and Ireland which led to a first one-man show at the Wertheim Gallery in 1937. Subsequently Hurry worked in France and produced two books of automatic drawings, The Journey and Book of the Seven Eagles, which had his own text. Redfern Gallery exhibitions led to Hurry’s work being seen by Robert Helpmann, the ballet dancer, which led to their collaboration on a production of Hamlet. Hurry became closely associated with Sadler’s Wells and the theatre, while showing at galleries in London and abroad.

Text source: 'Artists in Britain Since 1945' by David Buckman (Art Dictionaries Ltd, part of Sansom & Company)


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