William McCance


William McCance was a Scottish artist, and was second Controller of the Gregynog Press in Powys, mid-Wales.

Biography

Born in 1894 in Cambuslang, Scotland, William McCance was the seventh of eight children. After attending Hamilton Academy, McCance entered Glasgow School of Art, studying there 1911–15 and subsequently undertaking a teacher-training course at Glasgow's Kennedy Street school.
A conscientious objector in World War I, McCance was imprisoned.
After discharge from prison in 1919, McCance and his illustrator/engraver wife, Agnes Miller Parker , moved to London, where McCance was employed as a teacher and art critic, writing for The Spectator. McCance's paintings in the 1920s were unusual in that he was one of the few Scottish artists who embraced the cubist, abstract and machine-inspired arts movements that spread across Europe following the First World War.
In the 1930s McCance took the post of second Controller of the famous Gregynog Press, Wales, founded in 1922, after which he taught book design at the University of Reading.
William McCance died in 1970.
A collection of his paintings is held in the National Galleries of Scotland and Dundee Art Gallery, and in 1975 a retrospective exhibition of his work was shown at Dundee, Glasgow and Edinburgh.