Who was Richard Hamilton?

British pop artist Richard Hamil­ton landed the job via mutual friend, gallery owner Robert Fraser

Richard Hamil­ton in a photo taken around 1970

Richard Hamil­ton was born April 24 1922, and died Sep­tem­ber 13 2011 in Eng­land at age 89. A British painter and col­lage artist whose art col­lages of the 1950s directly inspired Sir Peter Blake, who cre­ated the Bea­t­les’ Sgt. Pep­per cover. He has been called the “Father of Pop Art”, and was the artis­tic genius behind the Bea­t­les’ iconic White Album pack­age design.

He was closely asso­ci­ated with the Swing­ing Lon­don of the 1960s. One of his well-known paint­ings depicted Mick Jag­ger and art dealer Robert Fraser hand­cuffed together in the back of a police car. As a teacher, one of his art stu­dents was Bryan Ferry of Roxy Music. Hamil­ton is often cred­ited as one of the orig­i­nal pop artists, as well as the coiner of the phrase. For his design of the blank White Album cover and the collage-style poster inside, Hamil­ton claimed to have been paid the equiv­a­lent of just $316.

Hamilton’s 1956 col­lage titled ‘Just What Is It that Makes Today’s Homes So Dif­fer­ent, So Appeal­ing?, pro­duced for the This is Tomor­row exhi­bi­tion of the Inde­pen­dent Group in Lon­don, is con­sid­ered by some crit­ics and his­to­ri­ans to be the first work of Pop Art.

Born into a work­ing class fam­ily, Richard Hamil­ton grew up in the Pim­lico area of Lon­don. Hav­ing left school with no for­mal qual­i­fi­ca­tions Hamil­ton got work as an appren­tice work­ing at an elec­tri­cal com­po­nents firm. Here he dis­cov­ered an abil­ity for drafts­man­ship and began to do paint­ing at evening classes at St. Martin’s School of Art which even­tu­ally lead to his entry into the Royal Acad­emy Schools. After spend­ing the war work­ing as a tech­ni­cal drafts­man he re-enrolled at the Royal Acad­emy Schools but was later expelled. After two years at the Slade School of Art Richard Hamil­ton began exhibit­ing at the ICA where he also pro­duced posters and leaflets and teach­ing at the Cen­tral School of Art and Design where he became a life­long friend with Eduardo Paolozzi. Hamil­ton and Paolozzi formed the Inde­pen­dent Group based at the ICA. Other mem­bers of that group included the painter Magda Cordell, the pho­tog­ra­pher Nigel Hen­der­son, the archi­tects Ali­son Smith­son and Peter Smith­son, the art crit­ics Lawrence Alloway, Reyner Ban­ham and Toni del Renzio.

Pop Art should be pop­u­lar, tran­sient, expend­able, low-cost, mass-produced, young, witty, sexy, gim­micky, glam­orous, and big business

~ Richard Hamilton

In 1952 through Roland Pen­rose, who Hamil­ton had met at the ICA, he was into­duced to the Green Box notes of Mar­cel Duchamp. It was also through Pen­rose that Hamil­ton met Vic­tor Pass­more who gave him a teach­ing post based in Newcastle-Upon-Tyne which lasted to 1966. The post afforded Hamil­ton the time to fur­ther his research on Duchamp which resulted in the pub­li­ca­tion of a typo­graphic ver­sion of Duchamp’s Green Box in 1960. Hamilton’s 1955 exhi­bi­tion of paint­ings at the Hanover Gallery were all in some form a homage to Duchamp. In the same year Hamil­ton organ­ised the exhi­bi­tion Man Machine Motion at the Hat­ton Gallery in New­cas­tle. Designed to look more like an adver­tis­ing dis­play than a con­ven­tional art exhibit the show pre­fig­ured Hamilton’s con­tri­bu­tion to This is Tomor­row the fol­low­ing year.

The suc­cess of This is Tomor­row secured Hamil­ton fur­ther teach­ing assign­ments in par­tic­u­lar at the Royal Col­lege of Art from 1957–61 where he pro­moted David Hock­ney and Peter Blake. Dur­ing this period Hamil­ton was also very active in CND. In the early 1960s he received a grant from the Arts Coun­cil to inves­ti­gate the con­di­tion of the Kurt Schwit­ters ‘Mertzbarn’ in Cum­bria. The research even­tu­ally resulted in Hamil­ton organ­is­ing the preser­va­tion of the work by relo­cat­ing it to the Hat­ton Gallery. In 1962 his first wife Terry was killed in a car crash and, in part to recover from this, he trav­elled for the first time to Amer­ica where, as well as meet­ing other lead­ing Pop Artist, he was befriended by Mar­cel Duchamp. Aris­ing from this Hamil­ton curated the first and to date only British ret­ro­spec­tive of Duchamp’s work which also required Hamil­ton to make copies of The Bride Stripped Bare of Her Batch­e­lors, Even and other glass works too frag­ile to travel. The exhi­bi­tion was shown at the Tate Gallery in 1966.

From the mid-1960s Hamil­ton was rep­re­sented by Robert Fraser at the Indica Gallery and even pro­duced a series of prints Swing­ing Lon­don based on Fraser’s arrest with Mick Jag­ger for pos­s­e­sion of drugs. This asso­ci­a­tion with the 1960s Pop Music scene con­tin­ued as Hamil­ton became friends with Paul McCart­ney result­ing in him pro­duc­ing the col­lage for the inside of the White Album.

Hamil­ton had also been the teacher of Bryan Ferry and Nick de Ville in New­cas­tle a few years before and his influ­ence can be found in the visual styling and approach of Roxy Music.

Richard Hamil­ton in a photo taken in Lon­don in the late 1960’s

Dur­ing the 1970s Richard Hamil­ton enjoyed inter­na­tional acclaim with a num­ber of major exhi­bi­tions being organ­ised of his work. Hamil­ton had found a new com­pan­ion in the painter Rita Don­nagh and together they set about con­vert­ing North End a farm in the Oxford­shire coun­try­side into a home and stu­dios. Hamil­ton realised a series of projects that blurred the bound­aries between art­work and prod­uct design includ­ing a paint­ing that incor­po­rated a state-of-the-art radio receiver and the cas­ing of a Diab Com­puter. In 1977–8 Hamil­ton under­took a series of col­lab­o­ra­tions with the artist Dieter Roth that also blurred the def­i­n­i­tions of the artist as sole author of his work.

From the late 1940s Richard Hamil­ton has been engaged with a project to pro­duce a suite of illus­tra­tions for James Joyce’s Ulysses. Asso­ci­ated with this in 1981 began work on a tril­ogy of paint­ings based on the con­flicts in North­ern Ire­land after watch­ing a tele­vi­sion doc­u­men­tary about the protest organ­ised by IRA pris­on­ers in Longcech Prison — more pop­u­larly known as The Maze. The Cit­i­zen 1981–3 shows a dirty pro­tester with long hair and a beard stylised in a way to make him appear sim­i­lar to a Chris­t­ian mar­tyr. The Sub­ject 1988–9 shows an Orange­man, a mem­ber of the order ded­i­cated to defend Union­ism in North­ern Ire­land. The State 1993 shows a British sol­dier on a soli­tary patrol on a street. Crit­i­cal responses to the works have been divided with those both on the polit­i­cal left and right accus­ing Hamil­ton of naïveté.

Dur­ing the 1980s Hamil­ton also voy­aged into indus­trial design and designed two com­puter exte­ri­ors: OHIO com­puter pro­to­type (for a Swedish firm named Isotron, 1984) and DIAB DS-101 (for Datain­dus­trier AB, 1986).

Hamilton’s out­put of new work since 1993 has been lim­ited. In 1992 the Tate Gallery in Lon­don orga­nized a major ret­ro­spec­tive of Hamilton’s career with an accom­pa­ny­ing cat­a­logue which pro­vides the most com­pre­hen­sive review of his career. In 1993 Hamil­ton rep­re­sented Great Britain at the Venice Bien­nale and was awarded the Golden Lion.

The Tate Gallery now has a com­pre­hen­sive col­lec­tion of Hamilton’s work from across his career.


Left: “Just What Is It that Makes Today’s Homes So Dif­fer­ent, So Appeal­ing?“
R. Hamil­ton (1956)