Marie Walker Last


Marie Walker Last was a British artist working in London in the late 1950s and early 1960s before returning to continue painting in her Yorkshire home until her death in 2017. She developed her own style of Tachisme abstract painting.

Early life & Family

Marie Walker Last was born to Ethel and Hubert Walker, a textile manufacturing family in Cleckheaton. Her father was an art collector and the young Marie was inspired by an artist aunt Hilda Walker to study art in Leeds. In 1953 she joined a group of amateur painters on a painting course in Bruges, led by the landscape painter, Jack Merriott. Under his tutelage, she became a member of the Northern Federation of Artists and attended their summer painting schools during the mid 1950s. Here she met leading artists of the time, including Robert Medley and Terry Frost, they encouraged Marie to apply to Chelsea School of Art, where in 1956 she was accepted. She is the Great Aunt of James Northcote

Career

London

From a traditional, privileged and protected background she left Yorkshire to take up her place at the Chelsea School of Art Chelsea College of Artswhere she was taught by Vivian Pitchforth in the late 1950s and moved into the cutting edge of Art at the New Vision Gallery under the directorship of Denis Bowen who became a close friend and mentor. Bowen held her first London exhibition at New Vision Gallery where she worked closely with avant garde European artists - including members of the Zero. She had a lifelong friendship with Robert Graves, the artist César Domela- who shared a studio with Piet Mondrian -and Domela's family and the artist Nancy Horrocks and her husband Major General Sir Brian Horrocks. She shared a studio with acclaimed Guyanese artist Aubrey Williams for several years before returning to Yorkshire to marry local solicitor Tom Last. She joined the Women's International Art Club and exhibited in Britain and overseas with them. She also became a member of the Free Painters and Sculptors and the Artists International Association, exhibiting her work with them on a regular basis.

Yorkshire

Moving to Ilkley Marie bought an empty chapel in Menston to use as her studio meeting Arthur Kitching, the curator of the Manor House Museum, Ilkley, who encouraged her painting and in 1964 offered her the chance of her first Yorkshire solo exhibition. Subsequent solo exhibitions in Yorkshire were held at the Goosewell Gallery, Menston, 1969; the Park Square Gallery, Leeds, 1974; and a first major retrospective exhibition of her work at Dean Clough Gallery in 1991. Cartwright Hall, Bradford, also held two retrospective exhibitions of her work, the last in 2001. There were major exhibitions of her work were at the Camden Arts Centre, London in 1980 – where she won First Prize in the Druce Constable Award– and at Leighton House, London, 1981. An exhibition of her studio contents was held in June 2018 courtesy of the Trustees at Manor House Museum Ilkley.
Examples of Marie Walker Last's work has been purchased for permanent collections, including Granada Television, and the Halifax Building Society and in the publicly accessible collections of the York, Leeds and Bradford Universities, plus The Open University, and in the Bradford Museums and Galleries permanent collection. She was awarded an honorary degree by the University of Bradford in 1996. On her death the major part of the personal art collection of Tom and Marie Last were left to the Stanley and Audrey Burton Gallery including works by Alfred Wallace and Ben Nicholson which were acquired with the help of Tom's colleague the Yorkshire solicitor and art collector Cyril Reddihough.