peoplepill id: philip-core
PC
United States of America
1 views today
1 views this week
Philip Core
American painter and writer

Philip Core

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
American painter and writer
A.K.A.
Philip McCammon Core
Work field
Gender
Male
Birth
Death
1989 (aged 38 years)
Age
38 years
Education
Harvard University,
Academy of Fine Arts, Florence,
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Philip McCammon Core (1951 – 1989) was an American artist and writer. He spent most of his life in England.

Biography

Core grew up in New Orleans, the son of a well-to-do family. At just seven he won the Vieux Carré Open Artists Competition. He was sent to a military academy, and from 1963 to the Middlesex School in Concord, Massachusetts. He attended Harvard University, where he won a number of art and literature prizes. As a schoolboy he self-published a booklet of drawings Palm Fronde Alphabet. An interest in Aubrey Beardsley and fin de siècle artists and writers, led to him spending time in Paris working with Philippe Jullian on his book The Symbolists, before returning to Harvard to complete an honours thesis on Belgian symbolist Fernand Khnopff. He graduated in 1973.

Under the pseudonym Féllippé Fecit, he produced a series of erotic drawings for the poet John Glassco for his book Squire Hardman, and in 1968 in the Japanese style for The Temple of Pederasty, a free adaption by Glassco of a work by Japanese expatriate writer Ken Sato.

Of this time, George Melly wrote of Core: "an exaggerated child of that extraordinary decade, he made experimental films, bought and designed for a New York boutique, illustrated rather outré books published in limited editions, and workedon an extreme persona. He was untypical only in his lack of interest indrugs. As someone for whom hallucinatory powers were already part of hisarmoury, and for whom work is of primary importance, chemical stimulae appeared not only unnecessary, but a threat to creation."

Following Harvard he attended the Ruskin School of Drawing and Fine Art in Oxford, and then the Accademia di Belle Arti di Firenze in Florence. In 1975, in his mid-twenties, he settled permanently in London, living in a flat in Elephant and Castle that was painted completely black.

It was an economically depressed period in the UK, but Core managed to gain some income contributing art work to gay magazines, and via private commissions. These included a mural for the Ritz hotel depicting a range of guests over the 75-year history of the hotel.

He became the photography critic for The Independent, and wrote also number of obituaries for the newspaper, including those for Robert Mapplethorpeand Jean-Michel Basquiat.

1984 saw the publication by him of two books: Camp: The Lie That Tells The Truth, and The Original Eye: arbiters of twentieth-century taste.

His encyclopaedic knowledge of lesser-known figures in nineteenth and twentieth century culture led to him becoming a commentator on the BBC Radio 4 programme Kaleidoscope.

Core died of AIDS November 1989 at the Westminster Hospital in London.

In a catalogue of an exhibition of his work, Core wrote: "I am not a great artist, only someone who loves painting, drawing and making things with his hands above all else; someone who has, by some curious gift of heredity, become possessed of articulacy and intransigence in equal degree; someone who knows what they love and feels no shame about it."

His work is in the collection of the Arts Council of Great Britain.

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article on 04 Aug 2020. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
Lists
Philip Core is in following lists
comments so far.
Comments
From our partners
Sponsored
Reference sources
References
Philip Core
arrow-left arrow-right instagram whatsapp myspace quora soundcloud spotify tumblr vk website youtube pandora tunein iheart itunes