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Clara Klinghoffer (1900 - 1970)

The Artist’s Sister, 1919

SKU: 6379

Signed and dated on reverse  
Oil on canvas
26 1/4 x 21 1/2  in. (67 x 55 cm)

Size:
Height – 67cm
Width – 55cm

DESCRIPTION

Provenance:
With the current owner’s family since 1938
Presentation:
framed

Clara Klinghoffer was born in Szerzezec (now Lemberg), a village near

Lwów (now Lviv), in that contested region that was once Poland, and

which at the time of her birth was part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire

and is now in Ukraine. Her Jewish parents immigrated to England in 1903,

settling first in Manchester and then in the East End of London.

Klinghoffer displayed an early aptitude for art. She studied at the

Slade immediately after the Great War and was quickly recognised as an

impressive young talent, holding her first one-woman exhibition at the

Hampstead Gallery in 1919. Her work was heavily influenced by the High

Renaissance artists so admired by her teacher, Henry Tonks. Indeed, in

1937 Mary Chamont would write in Modern Painting in England that

Klinghoffer’s drawings ‚Äúwere comparable to the great Italian masters‚Äù. Her

early paintings, however, were a rather different affair. This portrait of one

of her six sisters, with its bold use of colour and naïve execution, clearly

reveals the modernist influence of fellow Jewish artists such as Bernard

Meninsky, Jacob Kramer and Mark Gertler.

Whilst Klinghoffer enjoyed early recognition, one leading critic, PG

Konody of The Observer, was not alone in expressing disappointment

in her subsequent development: ‚ÄúMiss Clara Klinghoffer’s undeniable

accomplishment and sensitive draughtsmanship seem to have led her into a

blind alley”, he complained in 1925, “from which she does not even attempt

to escape. Each new drawing of her familiar types is like an unnecessary

assertion of her cleverness. Her chief merit lies in her appreciation of the

plastic life contained within the contours of the human figure.”

Commentary by David Boyd Haycock, freelance writer and curator with a specialism in British art of the early

twentieth century. He is the author of a number of books, including A Crisis of Brilliance: Five Young

British Artists and the Great War (2009).

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THE ARTIST

Clara Klinghoffer
Clara
Klinghoffer
1900 - 1970

Clara Klinghoffer emigrated from Austria to England with
her family in 1903. She studied art at the John Cass Institute
in Aldgate and the Central School of Arts and Crafts before
enrolling at the Slade School of Fine Art (1918’20). 

Gaining immediate critical acclaim at a remarkably young
age with her first solo exhibition, held at the Hampstead Gallery
in 1919, she exhibited widely in the UK, Europe and North
America in the ensuing years, including at the 1924 Venice
Biennale, and the Redfern Gallery (1925) and RA (1933) in
London. She also travelled extensively throughout her life,
moving to Amsterdam in 1929 and New York in 1939. 

Much of Klinghoffer’s work is characterised by a focus on the
human figure, and she made portraits of many eminent sitters ‘
such as Sir Winston Churchill, Vivien Leigh and Isaac Bashevis
Singer ‘ notable for their relaxed, somewhat candid composition.

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Clara Klinghoffer (1900 - 1970)
The Artist’s Sister, 1919
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Clara Klinghoffer (1900 - 1970)
Rose, with mortar and pestle, 1919