Ben Uri Research Unit

for the study and digital recording of the Jewish, Refugee and wide Immigrant contribution to British visual culture since 1900.


Ellen Kuhn artist

Ellen Kuhn was born into a Jewish family in Munich, Germany in 1937, fleeing with her family to New York in 1939. As a teenager she studied art at the University of Wisconsin and Berkeley, moving to England with her husband John Charap in 1963. Her work ranged from commercial printing to abstract expressionism and during the 1960s, it reflected civil unrest including the war in Vietnam.

Born: 1937 Munich, Germany

Died: 2013 London, England

Year of Migration to the UK: 1963

Other name/s: Ellen Kuhn Charap, Ellen Charap


Biography

Artist Ellen Kuhn was born into a Jewish family in Munich, Germany on 20 April 1937. In August 1939 the family fled to New York, catching the last Holland-American line ship. They settled in Harlem, where Kuhn attended her first life-drawing class at the age of eight. As a teenager she studied at the University of Wisconsin, afterwards completing a master’s in fine art at Berkeley.

After meeting and marrying scientist John Charap in San Francisco, she moved with him to England in 1963, settling in London. Her work ranged from commercial printing to abstract expressionism, the latter deriving from her period in New York. During the 1960s, she also produced work reflecting civil unrest including the war in Vietnam. In England, she painted London's busy streets and monuments, and at night became fascinated by the transition of the River Thames into a world of abstract colour and form. She also loved to paint scenery, enjoying the challenge of working fast in watercolour and her landscapes include scenes in both Brittany and Dorset. The cinema also provided inspiration for her paintings and during the 1980s she created a series of imaginative silkscreen prints that she exhibited at the Royal Academy. One of the most fruitful times in her creative life was at The Place Theatre, where, also in the 1980s, she attended rehearsals of The London Contemporary Dance Theatre, and later of the Richard Alston Dance Company, drawing the dancers in action. She worked fast in coloured chalk and pencils, with free gestures that match the spirit of the dancers themselves and later made more ambitious works based on photographs she had taken in situ. She first exhibited at Ben Uri in the Annual Summer Exhibition in 1964, and also had a joint exhibition at Ben Uri with Belinda Harding in 1983. She also taught at the Henrietta Barnett School, the London College of Furniture and Camden Arts Institute. Ellen Kuhn died on 10 July 2013, whilst living in Hampstead where even in her final illness she loved to watch the Heath changing with the seasons; her ashes were scattered in Hampstead boating pond. Her work is represented in the Ben Uri Collection and that of the Victoria and Albert Museum.

Public collections

Related organisations

  • Henrietta Barnett School (teacher)
  • London College of Furniture (teacher)
  • Camden Arts Institute (teacher)

Related web links

Selected exhibitions

  • Ellen Charap, Art Bermondsey Gallery, London (2014)
  • Dancing at The Place. An Art Exhibition by Ellen Charap, The Place Theatre, London (2013)
  • Group exhibition, Printroom, Hampstead Village (2006)
  • Royal Academy of Arts (1988, 1985)
  • Belinda Harding, Paintings, Collages and Drawings – Ellen Kuhn, Pastels, Drawings and Prints, Ben Uri Art Gallery (1983)
  • Royal Academy of Arts (1982)
  • Gallery 273, Queen Mary College, London (1969)
  • Curwen Gallery, London
  • Redmark Gallery, London
  • Annual Summer Exhibition, Ben Uri Gallery (1964)