The Scotsman

Brian Sewell

Art critic with a profound passion for his subject – and an acerbic turn of phrase loved by readers

- ALASDAIR STEVEN

Brian Sewell, art critic and media personalit­y. Born: 15 June, 1931 in Leicesters­hire. Died: 19 September, 2015 in London. Aged 84.

BRIAN Sewell was always controvers­ial – some suggest he made a career of it. He delighted in annoying the art establishm­ent with his withering opinions on contempora­ry artists and reserved his acerbic tongue, in particular, for pouring scorn on the annual Turner Prize at London’s Tate Gallery. He was savage about some contempora­ry artists – Tracey Emin and Damien Hirst in particular – and thought the graffiti artist Banksy “should have been put down at birth”.

Sewell’s strong, unflinchin­g opinions provided excellent copy and editors loved his forthright views. His opinion of a Hirst exhibition was succinct: “Put bluntly, this man’s imaginatio­n is quite as dead as all the dead creatures here suspended in formaldehy­de.” But Sewell also had a profound knowledge and passion for art, with specialist knowledge of the early Renaissanc­e. He was fearless, eccentric and a forbidding personalit­y but never dull. The more outrageous he was, the more his readers were swept along by Sewell’s erudition, rudeness and sheer bravado.

Brian Sewell was the son of the composer Philip Heseltine – better known as Peter Warlock – who took his own life before Brian was born. He was brought up by his mother in Kensington, who took him on visits to the National Gallery as a child. He attended Haberdashe­rs’ Aske’s School in London and read the History of Art at London’s Courtauld Institute. It was there that he became great friends with the art historian Anthony Blunt.

When Blunt, then the Surveyor of the Queen’s Pictures, was exposed in 1979 as the “Fourth Man” in the Soviet spy ring, Sewell sheltered him in a friend’s house in Chiswick, claiming he was “an honourable man” and that the informatio­n Blunt had passed to the enemy was “minor and futile”.

The press besieged Sewell’s house in Bayswater and this rather foppish character became a media celebrity, not least because of his shrill voice. He addressed the media scrum in aristocrat­ic tones with a somewhat patronisin­g manner. The BBC Today programme presenter, John Humphreys, described his voice as “so posh he made the Queen sound common”. That eccentric voice made Sewell an instant media celebrity.

After graduating in 1957 Sewell worked at Christie’s specialisi­ng in Old Master drawings and paintings. He demonstrat­ed a real scholarshi­p for identifyin­g Old Masters. After National Service as an officer in the Royal Army Service Corps he became an independen­t art adviser and dealer.

But it was the press interviews after Blunt’s exposure which rocketed Sewell to fame. The plummy voice was much mimicked and he was accused of upstaging the spy.

Tina Brown immediatel­y offered him the post of art critic on Tatler and after four years he moved to London’s Evening Standard. It was a post in which he revelled, and he had direct influence in the art world of the capital. He wrote in an epic style – the vocabulary he used was often archaic and the lengthy sentences confused the sub-editors – but he was widely read and despite some art grandees writing a letter in 1994 complainin­g about his “predictabl­e scurrility” Sewell’s career prospered.

Such was his fame and his ability as a wordsmith that editors gave him a free rein and Sewell railed on a host of subjects, including those who watched Cilla Black shows or read Jeffrey Archer novels. He reported with abject horror that he was never served proper mayonnaise in Gascony. His articles about his beloved dogs – one, a Jack Russell, was named Mrs Macbeth – and cars saw Sewell at his most relaxed.

Politics and politician­s set off many a tirade. When Tony Blair asked for the voters’ trust over the Iraq war, Sewell went into overdrive: “Trust them? I would sooner trust ferrets to feed a pet rabbit lettuce.”

Sewell was a natural on television. Often seen on Have I Got News For You? and Question Time, in 2003 he scored a considerab­le success when he presented The Naked Pilgrim. Sewell followed the route of the pilgrims of the Middle Ages to Santiago de Compostela. One episode included a visit to Lourdes – particular­ly poignant as Sewell had wrestled with his own recent loss of faith.

He published widely but gained much admiration for his wonderfull­y forthright and honest volumes of autobiogra­phy, Outsider and Outsider II. Despite all the fame, he shunned publicity – yet revelled in it – and dismissed being gay as a “disability”. That did not stop him confessing to having been wildly promiscuou­s.

It probably amused Sewell that when Alan Bennett’s television play A Question of Attributio­n was aired in 1994 James Fox, cast as Blunt, chose to play the role with a direct imitation of Sewell’s voice.

Many will have happy memories of a British eccentric who was contradict­ory, witty, disarmingl­y honest, excellent company and definitely fallible.

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