
Aunt Lilla c.1943

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Dod Procter nee Shaw RA, 1890
- 1972
Doris (‘Dod’) Shaw was only fifteen when her mother brought her and
her brother to study at Stanhope and Elizabeth Forbes’ art school. It
was there that she met fellow student Ernest Procter, whom she married
in 1912.
Dod’s mother also took her to Paris, in 1910, to study at the Atelier
Colorossi, where she was inspired by the impressionist and post-impressionist
painters, especially Cezanne and Renoir.
Through the 1920s she specialised in painting the figure, usually single
female figures, sometimes nude, others in softly draped clothes. One
of these paintings, ‘Morning’, was bought by the Daily Mail for the
Tate Gallery collections, which made Dod Procter a household name of
the day.
Ernest Procter died suddenly in Newcastle in 1935. After a period of
travel, Dod returned to west Cornwall in 1938, living in the area
until her death, occasionally visiting abroad and often exhibiting
in London, including at the Royal Academy.
The style of Dod Procter’s later works changed considerably, as did
the subject matter, which included landscapes, paintings of children
and still-life. She died aged 80, thirty-seven years after her husband.
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