Yorkshire Post - Property

House of French artist who set up base in Yorkshire

Royal Avenue, Scarboroug­h Offers over 300,000 www.cphpropert­y.co.uk

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As property credential­s go, they don’t come much better than being the former home and painting studio of renowned

19th century French painter and lithograph­er Paul Marny.

Marny had an eye for beauty and quality of light, both of which are apparent in this large Victorian townhouse on Scarboroug­h’s South Cliff, which is on the market for the first time in 60 years.

A highly prolific artist, Marny was especially noted for both his landscape and town scenes and his work was exhibited at the Paris Salon and the Royal Academy.

Whilst working for a French architect in Belfast, the Paris-born artist was persuaded to come to Scarboroug­h by the pioneering photograph­er and gallery owner Oliver Sarony.

He and his French wife Claire lived in the 15-room house at 12 Royal Avenue during the 1890s, with the north-facing top floor front bedroom serving as the painting studio.

Further adding to the property’s creative provenance, in the early 1970s, this same room was also the first studio of internatio­nal graphic designer Dave Clark. He is best known for his New Zealand All Blacks logo and now runs a design consultanc­y in Auckland.

In later years, it was used by Mr Clark’s developer-architect brother Jeremy as his design studio. He was later part of the London team that redesigned the Queen’s Galleries at Buckingham Palace.

Purchased in 1960 by the Clark brothers’ forbear – Merchant

Naval Master Mariner Captain George Vickers Clark – the house became the family home for him, his Viennese wife Greta (a refugee of the Holocaust), and their five children. All seven members of the Clark family actively engaged in drawing and painting.

Marny, who spent half his life in Scarboroug­h, created some of his best work at the house and is buried in Dean Road cemetery.

The property has been sensitivel­y and comprehens­ively renovated with a new roof, new plumbing and electrics and replastere­d walls but it still retains its period features.

There are six/seven bedrooms, three bathrooms and three reception rooms, a kitchen and a basement cellar. Outside is a front garden and a south-facing courtyard garden to the rear.

The house is a few minutes stroll from Scarboroug­h’s South Bay, Esplanade and Spa complex and from the Ramshill Road shopping area.

Contact: CPH Estate Agents, tel. 01723 352235, www.www.cphpropert­y.co.uk

Paul Marny, who spent half his life in the town, created some of his best work at the house.

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 ??  ?? ART: The house where Marny lived and his former studio. His picture is from “Scarboroug­h and Whitby Watercolou­rists” by Colin Bullamore, courtesy of Scarboroug­h Library.
ART: The house where Marny lived and his former studio. His picture is from “Scarboroug­h and Whitby Watercolou­rists” by Colin Bullamore, courtesy of Scarboroug­h Library.

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