Mews art

Paintings of Mews by D.H. Lurot Betjeman


Doris Hope Lurot Betjeman is the mother of Lurot Brand's founder, Antoine Lurot. Born in Paris in 1915, she attended art school in Düsseldorf for a year in 1931, and was then accepted by the Ecole Nationale Supérieure des Beaux-Arts in Paris the following year.

In 1937, the renowned Paris gallery of Jean Charpentier held her first solo exhibition. Highly acclaimed by critics and the national press, the exhibition was a sell-out. The following year, she was commissioned by the British Embassy in Paris to execute a portrait of Sir Robert Cahill, 'Doyen of the Diplomatic Corps' and Commercial Councillor to the Embassy.

In 1939, she was invited to exhibit three paintings at the Salon des Artistes Français, and was subsequently awarded the prestigious Medaille d'Or by the Société Lorraine des Beaux-Arts for one of her works. During this year, she married and spent her time between Paris and Varengeville in Normandy.

In 1949, she exhibited for a second time at the Salon, where she was again awarded, this time with the Prix de la Savoie, by the Ministère de la Culture. With this honour, she was also bestowed with the permanent position of sociétaire of the Salon.

In 1956, she painted her first portrait of her cousin, Sir John Betjeman, at this home in Wantage. The following year, she was commissioned by the Spanish Royal Family to execute a portrait of Don Jaime of Spain. In 1960, she moved to London with her two children, and continued to undertake prestigious commissions, including a second portrait of Sir John Betjeman, which has since been bequeathed to his old school, Marlborough College.

She has continued to exhibit her works, most recently with a successful one-man show on London's Cork Street. As well as the numerous portrait commissions she has undertaken, her landscapes, still lives and nudes can be found in private collections all over the world.

Lurot Betjeman was commissioned by Lurot Brand to create a series of paintings of mews streets in central London. The original paintings can be seen in the Lurot Brand offices.