Mary Stormont


Mary Elizabeth Stormont was a British painter.

Life

Mary Elizabeth Sapsworth was born in London, England on 2 January 1871.   She was the daughter of George Sapsworth, leather merchant, and Elizabeth Deur, and elder sister to Katherine Emma Maltwood.
She married Howard Gull Stormont, an artist, in 1898, against the wishes of her parents. The couple eloped to Rye. They lived in Ypres Studio, Rye, East Sussex and they became the focus in Rye for visiting artists.  In the 1920s she was a founder member of the Rye Art Club.  The Rye Society of Artists continues the ethos and traditions of the founder members to this day.
She exhibited throughout her life, showing regularly at many locations, notably the Royal Academy, the Bruton Galleries, Walker Art Gallery, Royal Institute and the Ridley Art Club.  She first exhibited at the Royal Academy Summer Exhibition in 1899 with an oil painting, A wayside inn.  In the following year she exhibited both an oil painting and a watercolour.  She continued to exhibit in at least 17 Royal Academy Exhibitions, her last being in 1940.
She was especially sought after for her flower paintings but also painted interiors and landscapes.
As well as a painter, Stormont was an accomplished photographer. She chose women on the land and beaches around Rye as her subjects.
After her husband died in 1935 Stormont continued to live in Ypres Studio. In 1957 she founded the Rye Art Gallery Trust to promote interest in art through lessons, lectures and exhibitions.
She died in Battle, Sussex on 11 October 1962  and was buried in Rye. On her death she bequeathed Ypres Studio, approximately 100 art works, and money to the Rye Gallery Trust.  The Ypres Studio became The Rye Art Gallery and opened in 1965. The works she donated form the core of its permanent collection, which is housed in The Stormont Studio of the Rye Art Gallery. The permanent collection includes works by artists associated with Rye, such as Edward Burra and Paul Nash, and also a portrait of her painted by George James Coates.