Country Life

Sir Laurie Magnus’s favourite painting

The chairman of Historic England chooses a work of a familiar spot by a friend who was ‘always wonderful company’

- Sir Laurie Magnus

Martin O. H. Mann adopted his schoolboy nickname of Sargy. He spent his wartime childhood at his grandfathe­r’s in Devon with his mother, whom he adored. after progressiv­e Dartington Hall, he was apprentice­d by Morris Motors, playing drums in an Oxford jazz trio with Dudley Moore.

He abandoned thoughts of a maths degree to enter Camberwell College of art, where he was taught by Frank auerbach and Euan Uglow. He subsequent­ly taught painting at Camberwell for many years. in 1967, he started living as a guest of Elizabeth Jane Howard and Kingsley amis. in their absences, he looked after the amis boys, poker sessions one of their shared amusements. the arrangemen­t ended when he married the painter Frances Carey.

He began to lose his sight—‘it was a bugger, but i kept working… and my brain kept finding new ways to see the world’—and was registered blind in 1988.

in 1990, the now six-strong family moved to Bungay in Suffolk. the garden was on the river Waveney, the boundary with norfolk; it had always been his dream to live on a river. He started this painting ‘standing on the river’s edge, looking past the large willow to the river on its right and the end of my studio and a shed which had become [his eldest son] Peter’s camp, on its left. it was a wonderful subject and i struggled with it for months’.

Mann regarded blindness as, in some ways, a liberation. as Peter Mann says: ‘What is interestin­g is that he could only paint the way he did because of blindness.

Sir Laurie Magnus is Chairman of Historic England ‘ The delight of this painting is that I know the place and was a friend of the artist. It shows views, including Sargy’s studio, from his garden beside the River Waveney in Bungay, Suffolk. It’s a peaceful spot, little changed for at least 100 years. Sargy’s sight was already failing, but his ability to present colours and objects in such a gloriously vivid way is a triumphant response to the worst disability that can afflict a visual artist. He was always wonderful company–witty, a formidable intellect, interested in everything, kind, dedicated to his work and irrepressi­bly creative and brave ’

 ??  ?? Studio by the River, Summer, 1990, by Sargy Mann (1937–2015), 55in by 80in, Private Collection
Studio by the River, Summer, 1990, by Sargy Mann (1937–2015), 55in by 80in, Private Collection
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