Robert Lenkiewicz's estate settled a decade after Plymouth artist's death

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Friday, December 28, 2012
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Plymouth Herald

THE estate of Plymouth painter Robert Lenkiewicz has at last been settled, more than ten years after his death.

Final details of the financial element have yet to be revealed but the figure is said to be "substantial", The Herald can reveal.

  1. Above: Robert Lenkiewicz with his huge library of philosophical works. Next year will see the biggest exhibition ever of Lenkiewicz works. The display in Germany in June 2013 will also mark the first international show. Below: the late Michael Foot  with  his portrait by Lenkiewicz

  2. The Four Tramps, by Lenkiewicz, above. Below: workmen remove paintings after his death

  3. Robert Lenkiewicz painting a portrait of  actress Lesley Joseph, of Birds of a Feather fame, for charity Headway

That conclusion helps pave the way for a double landmark achievement in the struggle to keep the prolific painter and thinker's legacy alive.

Next year will see the biggest exhibition ever of Lenkiewicz works.

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The display in Germany in June 2013 will also mark the first international show of his work.

Organisers of the Lenkiewicz Foundation believe the exhibition will provide a boost to his growing reputation in the UK and abroad – and help pull in visitors to the centre in Plymouth dedicated to his name.

"It is really exciting," said John-Paul Somerville, operations director of the Lenkiewicz Foundation.

"The international exhibition is setting a new standard. It is an ambitious challenge which will put some strain on our resources. But it shows what is possible now the estate is settled."

The exhibition will also help raise the artistic profile of Plymouth as the city bids to become the UK City of Culture in 2017.

Plymouth Culture Board is due to submit an expression of interest in taking on the role to the Department of Culture, Media and Sport early in the New Year.

If successful that could result in a multi-million-pound tourism boost and the hosting of events such as the Brit Awards for music, Turner Prize for art and BBC Sports Personality of the Year ceremony.

Lenkiewicz Foundation spokesperson Anna Navas added: "Since Robert's death the Foundation's activities have been restricted by legal complications surrounding the long-standing estate.

"But with these issues resolved we can now pursue our primary objective of promoting Robert's work and ideas to the widest possible audience.

"The first large exhibition on such a scale reflects our ambitions for Robert's work. With his family connections we feel the heart of Europe is a good place to start, and we will of course bring any success home with us.

"With developments well under way to establish the foundation with a permanent base on the Barbican, what's good for Lenkiewicz is good for Plymouth."

When he died in 2002, Lenkiewicz's estate was initially valued at £6.5 million. But he left huge debts and complicated affairs, which forced the sale of large parts of his collection.

Full details of the final settlement of the estate have yet to be revealed.

However, between 30 and 40 oil paintings remain, plus many more watercolours and sketch and notebooks, and thousands of books, mainly on art history and philosophy.

Mr Somerville said a "substantial" amount of cash would also be coming to the Foundation, which was expected imminently.

This would help speed up the opening of Lenkiewicz's library and works to the public in the former St Saviour's church in Lambhay Hill, the Barbican. The building is also intended to become a place for people to study his work.

Lenkiewicz was shunned by critics and the established art world. He was known for his traditional realistic portrait style but his lifestyle and the subjects of his works were anything but. Lenkiewicz was known for his themes on sexuality, mental handicap and suicide and people on the margins, such as vagrants. His projects often ran to hundreds of works.

He is believed to have had about 12 children from a string of partners.

His work has always been popular with the public, though.

The Lenkiewicz show in Leipzig, eastern Germany, will expand on the Human, All Too Human exhibition of 25 oil paintings and other works which ran at the Royal William Yard last June.

That title comes from a Friedrich Nietzsche work and reflects his interest in the German philosopher's work.

The choice of Germany also chimes with the painter's Jewish/central European emigrant background.

But the scale of the German exhibition will be considerably greater, totalling about 100 works.

Thirty large-scale oil paintings and a further 30 in other formats, including watercolours and in gouache, will travel to Leipzig.

Copies of his notebooks will also go on display.

The exhibition will run for a month from the middle of next June. The venue will be the Spinnerei, once Europe's biggest cotton mill but now a complex devoted to creativity and culture.

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Comments

  • Profile image for MissAnthrope

    by MissAnthrope

    Friday, December 28 2012, 5:26PM

    “It's amazing how much money you can save when you never buy soap.”

  • Profile image for Laid_Back

    by Laid_Back

    Friday, December 28 2012, 5:05PM

    “@an20na, no the cost wasn't astrological they used the same lawyers that settled the estate of the late great astronomer-royal Sir Partick Thistle.”

  • Profile image for Nevman

    by Nevman

    Friday, December 28 2012, 4:31PM

    “Shame on the self-serving Foundation for blithely dismissing the Lenkiewicz family's battle for their moral right to the estate as "legal complications"!”

  • Profile image for newjanner

    by newjanner

    Friday, December 28 2012, 4:21PM

    “astrological costs.... Did Russell Grant sort out the estate”

  • Profile image for an20na

    by an20na

    Friday, December 28 2012, 4:01PM

    “Ten years seems to to be a very long time to settle this estate; the cost must have been astrological. Will this be posted? It might be a lesson to others, particularly in the present day of multiple families!”

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