Roy Strong
Sir Roy Colin Strong, is an English art historian, museum curator, writer, broadcaster and landscape designer. He has served as director of both the National Portrait Gallery and the Victoria and Albert Museum in London. Strong was knighted in 1982, and made a Member of the Order of the Companions of Honour in 2016.
Early years
Roy Colin Strong was born at Winchmore Hill, London Borough of Enfield, the third son of hat manufacturer's commercial traveller George Edward Clement Strong, and Mabel Ada Strong. He was raised in "an Enfield terrace sans books, with linoleum 'in shades of unutterable green'", and attended nearby Edmonton County School, a grammar school in Edmonton.Strong graduated with a first-class honours degree in history from Queen Mary College, University of London. He then earned his PhD degree from the Warburg Institute and became a research fellow at the Institute of Historical Research. His passionate interest in the portraiture of Queen Elizabeth I was sidelined "while he wrote a thesis on Elizabethan Court Pageantry supervised by the Renaissance scholar, Dame Frances Yates who restructured and re-formed...... thinking". In 2007, Strong listed his qualifications as DLitt PhD FSA.
Career
Victoria and Albert Museum
In 1973, aged 38, he became the youngest director of the Victoria and Albert Museum, London, following John Pope-Hennessy who moved to the British Museum. Strong proved something of a polarising figure condemned by Hennessy in his 1991 autobiography for "a thirteen years reign that reduced the museum and its staff to a level from which it will not recover for many years". During his tenure, until 1987, he presided over its exhibition The Destruction of the Country House, Change and Decay: the future of our churches, and The Garden: a Celebration of a Thousand Years of British Gardening, all of which have been credited with boosting their conservationist agendas. In 1977, following government cuts, he oversaw the closure of the much-lamented Circulation Department of the V&A, which organised tours of the collection around Britain. In 1980, "he was awarded the prestigious Shakespeare Prize by the FVS Foundation of Hamburg in recognition of his contribution to the arts in the UK". In 2003, he was awarded the Royal Photographic Society's President's Medal and Honorary Fellowship in recognition of a sustained, significant contribution to the art of photography.Television
Among other work for television, in 2008, Strong hosted a six-part TV reality series, The Diets That Time Forgot. He acted as the Director of the fictitious Institute of Physical Culture, where nine volunteers spent 24 days testing three weight-loss diets and fitness regimes that were popular in the late Victorian era, the Edwardian era, and the "roaring" Twenties. The weekly series was first aired on 18 March on Channel 4.Writing
Strong is a notable scholar of Renaissance art, especially English Elizabethan portraiture, on which he has written many books and articles. His diaries from 1967 to 1987 were published in 1999, as was The Spirit of Britain: A Narrative History of the Arts, a widely acclaimed 700-page popular history of the arts in Britain through two millennia. In 2005, he published Coronation: A History of Kingship and the British Monarchy. He had a monthly column in the Financial Times for much of the 1970s and 1980s, and has written articles for many other magazines and newspapers. In 2000, he wrote Gardens Through the Ages and is a patron of the Plantation Garden, Norwich.Personal life
Marriage
On 10 September 1971, Strong married 41-year-old theatrical designer Julia Trevelyan Oman at Wilmcote church, near Stratford-upon-Avon, with a special licence from the Archbishop of Canterbury. They enjoyed a belated honeymoon in Tuscany. She died in 2003 of pancreatic cancer.Herefordshire
Strong lives in the village of Much Birch in Herefordshire. Here, with his wife, he designed one of Britain's largest post-war formal gardens, the Laskett Gardens. In 1995, he and his wife commissioned the artist Jonathan Myles-Lea to paint a portrait of the house and gardens, which was completed the same year. Since 2010, the gardens have been open to the public by appointment, for groups of more than twenty. An offer by Strong to bequeath Laskett Gardens to the National Trust was rejected in 2014 after it was deemed that they fail to "reach the high rung of national and historic importance". Strong later announced plans to have the gardens "destroyed" after his death. He subsequently relented and in 2015 agreed to bequeath the gardens to the horticultural charity "Perennial".After leaving the V&A, Strong published a set of diaries that became notorious for its critical assessments of figures in the art and political worlds. It has been rumoured that he has retained a set for posthumous publication. Jan Moir commented in 2002: "His bitchy, hilarious diaries caused a storm when they were published in 1997 and although he has no plans at present to publish another set, he is keeping a private diary again."
Gardening
Strong subsequently designed gardens for Gianni Versace at Versace's Lake Como villa, Villa Fontanelle, and Versace's Miami house, Casa Casuarina. At Versace's behest, Strong designed an Italian garden at Elton John's residence, Woodside, in Old Windsor, Berkshire.Anglicanism
A practising Anglican, Strong is an altar server at Hereford Cathedral, and served as High Bailiff and Searcher of the Sanctuary of Westminster Abbey. In this capacity, he attended the funeral service of the Queen Mother in 2002. On 30 May 2007, in the crypt of St Paul's Cathedral, he delivered the annual Gresham College Special Lecture, titled "The Beauty of Holiness and its Perils," which was deeply critical of the status quo. He said: "little case can be made in the twenty-first century for an expensive building to exist for a service once a week or month lasting an hour," and he wanted to "take an axe and hatchet the utterly awful kipper coloured choir stalls and pews, drag them out of the church and burn them," and "letting in the local community" in order to preserve many rural churches in Britain.Portraits of Roy Strong
The National Portrait Gallery Collection has seventeen portraits of Strong, including a photo and a sketch by Cecil Beaton and an oil painting by Bryan Organ. An early bronze bust by Angela Conner is on view at Chatsworth House, Derbyshire. In 2005, Strong sat for Jon Edgar for a work in terracotta, which was exhibited at Yorkshire Sculpture Park in 2013 as part of the Sculpture Series Heads – Contributors to British Sculpture. A bronze of this head is in the permanent collection of the Bodleian Library, Oxford, where Strong's papers reside.Honours
In 1980, the Hamburg-based Alfred Toepfer Foundation awarded Strong its annual Shakespeare Prize in recognition of his life's work. Strong was knighted in the 1982 New Year Honours and was appointed Member of the Order of the Companions of Honour in the 2016 New Year Honours for services to culture. He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature in 1999.Honorary positions
- Chairman of the Art Department, Arts Council
- Deputy Chairman, Southbank Centre
- High Bailiff and Searcher of the Sanctuary of Westminster Abbey, 2000–2021
- President, Garden History Society, 2000–2006
- President, Friends of Croome Park, from 2008
- Vice-President Plant Heritage
- Patron Broadway Arts Festival, 2015
Books
Portraits of Queen Elizabeth I Leicester's Triumph, with J. A. van Dorsten.A Brief Guide to the National Portrait Gallery The English Icon: Elizabethan & Jacobean Portraiture Tudor & Jacobean Portraits in the National Portrait Gallery Nicholas Hilliard The Cult of Elizabeth: Elizabethan Portraiture and Pageantry And When Did You Last See Your Father?: The Victorian Painter and British History The Renaissance Garden in England The English Year: A Personal Selection from Chambers' Book of Days Artists of the Tudor Court: The Portrait Miniature Rediscovered 1520–1620 Art and Power: Renaissance Festivals 1450–1650 Strong Points Creating Small Gardens Henry Prince of Wales & England's Lost Renaissance Gloriana: The Portraits of Queen Elizabeth I A Small Garden Designer's Handbook Lost Treasures of Britain: Five Centuries of Creation and Destruction The Tudor and Stuart Monarchy: Pageantry, Painting, Iconography, Vol. 1 The Garden Trellis Small Period Gardens: A Practical Guide to Design and Planting A Country Life: At Home in the English Countryside Successful Small Gardens: New Designs for Time-conscious Gardeners William Larkin: Icons of Splendour Country Life, 1897–1997: The English Arcadia The Tudor and Stuart Monarchy: Pageantry, Painting, Iconography, Vol. 2: Elizabethan The Roy Strong Diaries 1967–1987 The Tudor and Stuart Monarchy: Pageantry, Painting, Iconography, Vol. 3: Jacobean and Caroline The Story of Britain: A People's History The Spirit of Britain: A Narrative History of the Arts The Artist & the Garden Gardens Through the Ages Feast: A History of Grand Eating The Laskett: The Story of a Garden Beaton Portraits Coronation: A History of Kingship and the British Monarchy Passions Past and Present A Little History of the English Country Church Visions of England Roy Strong: Self-portrait as a Young Man Remaking a Garden: The Laskett Transformed Scenes and Apparitions: The Roy Strong Diaries 1988-2003 Types and Shadows: The Roy Strong Diaries 2004–2015- ''The Stuart Image: English Portraiture 1603-1649''