Hugh Honour


Hugh Honour FRSL was a British art historian, known for his writing partnership with John Fleming. Their A World History of Art, is now in its seventh edition and Honour's Chinoiserie: The Vision of Cathay first set the phenomenon of chinoiserie in its European cultural context.

Early life

Honour was born in Eastbourne, Sussex, to Herbert and Dorothy Honour. He read English at St Catharine's College, Cambridge, graduating with a Bachelor of Arts degree. While at Cambridge, Honour met John Fleming, a solicitor and amateur art historian, who would become Honour's life partner. Honour accepted a position as Assistant director of Leeds City Art Gallery and Temple Newsam House but left after one year to join Fleming in Italy.

Life in Italy

Living in Asolo near Venice, Honour and Fleming began a highly-productive writing and publishing partnership, in which Fleming managed the business side of their enterprise and Honour wrote the books. They were commissioned by publisher Allen Lane to edit the Style and Civilisation series, which was published by Penguin Books. Under Honour's editorial guidance, the Style and Civilisation series published in quick succession a group of texts that have attained the status of classics, including John Shearman's Mannerism, George Henderson's Gothic, and Linda Nochlin's Realism. Honour's contribution, the highly regarded Neo-Classicism, single-handedly resuscitated the scholarly reputation of the period, which been despised or ignored during the modernist ascendancy. Romanticism, Honour's companion to Neo-Classicism, was published in 1979, long after the demise of the series.
Honour and Fleming also supervised the Architect and Society series ; and the Art in Context series for Penguin. In 1966, they revised and completed Nikolaus Pevsner's The Penguin Dictionary of Architecture, and in 1977 they published The Penguin Dictionary of Decorative Arts.
The couple's book, A World History of Art, was published in 1982, the first survey of global art history, including Western, Asian, African, Pre-Columbian and Native American art. It is now in its 7th edition. Honour wrote Venetian Hours of Henry James, Whistler and Sargent and edited the writings of the Neoclassical sculptor Antonio Canova.
In 1962, Honour and Fleming moved to Villa Marchiò outside Lucca, where they lived together until Fleming died in 2001 and where Honour resided until his death on 19 May 2016. Honour was elected in 1972 as a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature.

Selected publications

;Books
;Articles