The true colours of Scottish painter, George Leslie Hunter

The biggest exhibition in 50 years of the work of George Leslie Hunter provides an opportunity to properly assess the contribution he made to the Scottish Colourists, writes Tim Cornwell

The biggest exhibition in 50 years of the work of George Leslie Hunter provides an opportunity to properly assess the contribution he made to the Scottish Colourists, writes Tim Cornwell

The troubled life and erratic talent of the Scottish painter, George Leslie Hunter, comes under the spotlight this month in the biggest exhibition of his art in 50 years. From the devastating destruction of his studio in the San Francisco earthquake and fire of 1906, to his near-fatal swigging of a bottle of turps in Provence 20 years later, Hunter’s highs and lows made him both the best, and worst, of the Scottish Colourists.

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Many of his paintings, it is said, were spoiled by his habit of reworking them on the easel late at night, in poor light and after a few glasses of wine. His sudden death in 1931, aged 54, came just after the French government’s purchase of a painting had finally “opened the door” for his career, as he described it.