Robert Bevan was born in Hove, Sussex in 1865 and grew up in Horsgate, near Cuckfield. He studied at Westminster School of Art, London and at the Académie Julian in Paris.
His training during the 1890s also included two periods in Pont-Aven in Brittany – where he met Paul Gauguin – as well as time spent in Madrid and Tangier. He was a member of the Fitzroy Street, Camden Town, London and Cumberland Market Groups, founded in London between 1907 and 1914. In 1897, Bevan met and married the Polish artist Stanislawa de Karlowska (1876-1952). Three years later they moved to 14 Adamson Road, London, which remained their base for the rest of Bevan’s life. The couple became key figures in London’s art world before and after World War One and held popular ‘at homes’ on Sunday afternoons during the 1910s.
Printmaking was an important part of Bevan’s artistic practice. He used lithography early in his career but abandoned the medium in 1901. After 17 years Bevan returned to lithography at the end of the war with aplomb. A work like The Plantation, 1922, shows his mature mastery of the technique, along with a simplification of form, angular structure and clarity of composition. He brought this sensibility to all his landscape prints, capturing the essence of English villages and Polish homesteads.
Bevan was a highly-skilled horseman and his images of horses are amongst the most celebrated of his oeuvre. He would sketch during the horse sales in London, where he enjoyed the interaction between people and animals as much as the pace and spectacle of the event. This interest expanded into his printmaking practice and can be seen in lithographs such as Horse Dealers (Ward’s Repository No.1), The Horse Mart (Barbican No. 1) and Horse Dealers at the Barbican (Barbican No.2) produced from 1919 to 1921. Crocks of 1925 was his final lithograph and shows a pair of horses having been taken out of a cab’s shafts and led to a trough for a drink.
Following Bevan’s death in 1925, memorial exhibitions were held at the Goupil Gallery in London and at Brighton Art Gallery. Bevan’s works are held in many major public collections, including the British Museum, Victoria & Albert Museum and Ashmolean Museum, Oxford.