Attributed to Mervyn Peake (1911-1968) watercolour and ink illustration of an eerie character called Sir James, dated 1947, double mounted, framed within a gilt frame and behind glass.

Dimensions: 17cm x 9cm, with frame 40cm x 35 cm

Condition: In very good condition with bright colours, the illustration has at some time been cut and then glued back together; rubbing is evident on the 10th word in the paragraph. 

Mervyn Peake 

Mervyn Peake was born on 11 July 1911 in Kuling, Central Southern China, the summer residence of his father, the missionary doctor, Ernest Cromwell Peake, and his wife, Amanda, a missionary nurse. 

Apart from a holiday in England during WW1, Peake spent all his early years in China. 

In 1923, the family settled permanently in England, and Mervyn attended Eltham College, Kent, where he excelled at drawing. He then studied at Croydon School of Art (1929) and the Royal Academy Schools (1929-32), where he won the Arthur Hacker Prize (1930). 

While still a student, he exhibited for his one and only time at the Royal Academy (1931). He then joined an artists’ colony on the Channel Island of Sark, in order to write and paint. He exhibited with the group on the island and, in 1934, in London at the Cooling Galleries.

On his return to England in 1935, Peake spent three years as a part-time teacher at the Westminster School of Art; while there, he held his first solo show, at the Hans Calmann Gallery. He married Maeve Gilmore in December of the same year. 

In 1939, Peake published his first book Captain Slaughterboard Drops Anchor, an illustrated comic fantasy. This revealed him as an illustrator with an outstanding talent for the grotesque, ready to align himself to Romantic tendencies in British art.

While serving in the army, from 1940, Peake concentrated less on painting than on writing and illustrating, and began to work on 
Titus Groan, the first novel of his famous Gormenghast trilogy. Following his discharge as an invalid, in 1943, he completed the novel and published his acclaimed illustrations to The Rime of the Ancient Mariner (1943). 

He was soon considered ‘the greatest living illustrator’ (John Watney, Mervyn Peake, London: Michael Joseph, 1976, page 121). His illustrative projects from this time include Witchcraft in England by Christina Hole (1945) and Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde (1948) and contributions to Radio Times and, of his own writings, Rhymes without Reason (1944) and Titus Groan (1946). In 1945, he also visited Germany for Leader magazine to record the war-time devastation, and made drawings at Belsen which profoundly affected his later work.

Peake then returned to Sark, with his family, for a period of three years (1946-49), during which he wrote 
Gormenghast; published in 1950, it received both the Heinemann Award for Literature and a prize from the Royal Society of Literature in the following year. The final volume of the trilogy, Titus Alone, was published in 1959. 

Through the 1950s, he taught drawing at the Central School of Arts and Crafts. But, from the middle of the decade, he suffered from Parkinson’s disease which made work increasingly difficult. He completed his illustrations to Balzac’s Droll Stories (1961) and his own The Rhyme of the Flying Bomb (1962) only with his wife’s help and encouragement. He died on 17 November 1968 after spending the last four years of his life in hospital.

His work is represented in numerous public collections, including the Imperial War Museum; and the Wordsworth Trust (Grasmere). The Mervyn Peake Archive, which includes original drawings, is held by the British Library.