Dennis Farr


Dennis Larry Ashwell Farr was a British art historian and curator. Through his writings and the exhibitions he organised in his positions as director of City Museums and Art Gallery in Birmingham and subsequently as director of the Courtauld Institute Galleries, Farr established a reputation as a champion of 20th century British art.

Education

Dennis Farr was educated at Luton Grammar School and studied for his BA at the Courtauld Institute of Art, London University, from 1947 to 1950. It was Anthony Blunt, director of the Courtauld at the time, who steered him towards doing his MA dissertation on the nineteenth century painter William Etty. He was awarded an MA by the Courtauld in 1956.

Career

It was at the Courtauld too that Farr began his career, as assistant Witt Librarian from 1952 to 1954, before moving to the Tate Gallery as assistant keeper, where he remained until 1964. There then followed short stints as curator at the Paul Mellon Collection, Washington DC from 1965 to 1966, and then senior lecturer in fine art and deputy keeper of the University Art Collections, Glasgow University, from 1967 until 1969.
In 1969 he became director of Birmingham City Museums and Art Gallery, where he remained until 1980. It was a period during which the gallery was said to enjoy a "golden period" marked by major acquisitions including works by Bellini and Canaletto. The University of Birmingham awarded Farr an honorary doctorate in 1981 in recognition of his work in the city.
He returned to his alma mater in 1980 to take up the post of Director of the Courtauld Institute Galleries, where he remained until his retirement in 1993. One of his initial tasks was to integrate the recently-acquired Princes Gate Collection, mainly of Flemish and Italian paintings and drawings, into the Courtauld's wider collection. He subsequently oversaw the transfer of the Courtauld's collection from Woburn Square to rather grander galleries at Somerset House, which opened to the public in 1990.
During his career Dennis Farr also served as President of the Museums Association and Chairman of the Association of Art Historians. He was General Editor of Clarendon Studies in the History of Art from 1985 to 2001.

Awards and honours

Dennis Farr was awarded an honorary doctorate by the University of Birmingham in 1981.
He was made a Commander of the Order of the British Empire in 1991.

Later life

On his retirement from the Courtauld in 1993 Dennis Farr moved with his wife, the children's book author Diana Pullein-Thompson, to Haslemere in Surrey, the better to be able to pursue his leisure time passion of horse riding. He continued to write and to work as a guest curator of exhibitions. He died in Guildford on 6 December 2006.

Other information

Photographs contributed by Dennis Farr to the Conway Library are currently being digitised by the Courtauld Institute of Art, as part of the Courtauld Connects project.

Selected works

William Etty, Routledge & Kegan Paul
Catalogue of the Modern British School Collection, Oldbourne Press, London
British Sculpture Since 1945, Tate, London
English Art, 1870-1940, Oxford University Press
Lynn Chadwick, sculptor : with a complete illustrated catalogue, 1947-2003, Clarendon Press, Oxford
Farr published an autobiographical article, "in response to a suggestion from the Editor" in The Burlington Magazine, 2005, titled 'A student at the Courtauld Institute'.