Alison Edith Debenham (later Le Plat, 18 February 1903 – 24 November 1967) was a British painter and artist.

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Alison Debenham
Born
Alison Edith Debenham

18 February 1903[1]
Holland Park, London, England[1]
DiedNovember 24, 1967(1967-11-24) (aged 64)[2]
London, England
NationalityBritish
EducationSlade School of Art
Known forPortraiture
SpouseRené Le Plat (m. 1930)
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Biography

Debenham was born in 1903 in London,[1] to Sir Ernest Ridley Debenham, 1st Baronet, and his wife, Lady Cicely, of the Debenhams department store family business.[3] After attending a finishing school in Paris, Alison Debenham studied at the Slade School of Art in London from 1923 to 1926.[4] In 1928 she returned to live in Paris before, in 1929, moving to the south of France where she studied with the French painter Simon Bussy.[4] There she met several prominent artists and authors including André Gide and Henri Matisse and, in 1930, married artist René Le Plat.[3]

Throughout her artistic career, Debenham mostly painted portraits of friends and family members but also created a series of portraits of the workers on her father's estate.[3] She regularly exhibited in both London and Paris and her first solo exhibition was at the Galerie Vignon in Paris in 1932.[4]

In 1935 she had a solo show at the Zwemmer Gallery in London and for a time she was associated with the Euston Road School of artists. A memorial exhibition for Debenham was held at the Richmond Hill Gallery in 1968 and a further retrospective was mounted by the Belgrave Gallery in London in 1976.[3][4]

She died in 1967 in London and was survived by her son, Jean-Luc, and daughter, Clarissa.[2]

References

Further reading

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