THE GALLERY ON GREENE
Key West, Florida
John Allinson
John Allinson was born in Cardiff, Wales in 1942, son
of 2nd world war Royal Airforce hero Squadron Leader
Bill Allinson, and pianist Eira Allinson. After a
Grammar school education he attended the Central
School of Art in London, subsequently working as an
illustrator and graphic designer in North Africa
following the Algerian war, and raising funds for "War
on Want" through his artwork. During the ensuing
years he travelled prolifically throughout Europe,
working at just about any job he could find, including
fairground mechanic and illustrator, and as a
salesman at trade shows throughout West Germany.
He managed to find the occasional art commission,
and created graphics around a pot bellied stove in
Austria for local design agents and for little money.
In 1963 he joined the Royal Corps of Signals as a
draughtsman, but following an accident in Cyprus was
discharged from the Army, and began travelling again
in Europe.He worked as a car salesman for a number
of years, realising limited art commissions, and selling
portraits and newspaper illustrations at low prices to
try and achieve recognition.
He also became interested in ancient buildings, and
became a self taught technical writer, achieving
weekly commissions from British newspapers, and in
1979 was invited to assist in the design and
construction of a permanent care of buildings
exhibition at Hampton Court Palace, where he
designed and built mock houses and interiors, and
which drew media attention to his work.
It was at this time that he began to receive a
smattering of mural painting enquiries, and
subsequently was invited to muralise a restaurant in
Gibraltar. This was followed by further commissions,
Fish
Copyright 2009 Gallery on Greene
606 Greene Street____ • ____Key West, Florida 33040____ • ____(305) 294-1669____ • ____Open 10-6 daily
galleryongreene@bellsouth.net
Empire State Building (not available)
including a new waterfront development in Cardiff, Wales,
and portraiture for stately homes open to the public.
The first major breakthrough came with commissioned
drawings from impresario Robert Stigwood, followed by
an invitation to design and build a bronze memorial dedicated to South Wales Miners, where he cast three plaques weighing
300 pounds each, and mounted them on the largest single piece of limestone quarried in Wales.
He was then invited to represent Wales in painting at the Gymanfu Garni Eisteddfod in Pennsylvania, and also lectured there
on art, and held an exhibition of his work at the Susquehanna gallery in Harrisburg. He held subsequent exhibitions in
Baltimore, and was made a citizen of Maryland, and of the cities of Baltimore and Harrisburg.
By this time he was able financially to concentrate all of his efforts on his art, and spent a number of years painting murals in
the Channel Islands for corporate and private clients. He declined offers to hold exhibitions, being not so much interested in
the completed painting as the process of painting it and his quest to put light onto canvas. Media attention was prolific, and he
appeared on several television and radio programmes. He also received requests for illustrated furniture, particularly Victorian
Cabin Trunks, but the majority of his efforts were concentrated on mural painting, preferring the use of large scale colour and
tone.
In 2001, he was invited by filmmaker Richard Attenborough to break the record for the world's largest canvas painting, as a
celebration of the development of a major new film studio and theme park. 200x8 feet plus later, it was discovered that a
Chinese artist had completed 6600 feet of canvas, albeit with meagre content, and so the attempt was dropped.
As a result, media attention increased on what became 'Not the longest Painting.' Art Historian rex Harley wrote," In John
Allinson's painting 'House of Dreams' a host of artists and entertainers emerge from a swirl of colours, in the same way that
their human counterparts stepped out from the stream of history to entertain and enrich our lives. They are represented mainly
as heads and torsos, in a series of tableaux, solid and strong, conjured up in bold bravado strokes of paint. Though there is an
echo here of the film poster, the artist is not interested in slavishly capturing physical likeness. Thus, what could have been in
the hands of a less accomplished painter a series of disjointed and lifeless portraits becomes here, in this vast panorama, a
dynamic progression, action, set against the backdrop of time - the world in widescreen."
In 2003 he was invited by The Travel Channel to research a series of cultural travel programmes based in Florida, and spent
several visits filming from Miami to Key West, and painting large canvases at the Biltmore in Coral Gables, in Hemingway's
garden and Hardrock Café in Key West. He made a presentation to the Miami entertainments and Arts Council, and was
invited by Keys Commissioner George Neugent to erect the mammoth canvas on the Seven Mile Bridge, but this proved
logistically almost impossible, and he is now talking with Commissioner Neugent about other potential sites.
He formed a film production company in 2004, which has attracted support from a nucleus of specialist editing and production
professionals, and who now form the core of 'Crucial Cargo Film Productions,' and a documentary is in progress covering the
painting's journey from conception through to its anticipated erection in Florida.
John Allinson currently exhibits his work at The Gallery on Greene in Key West, where his first exhibition of paintings for many
years will take place in January 2005.