Education
In 1947 He travelled to London where he studied for a time at the Anglo-French centre in Street John's Wood.
In 1947 He travelled to London where he studied for a time at the Anglo-French centre in Street John's Wood.
A graduate of the Canterbury College School of Art (now the University of Canterbury School of Fine Arts) he returned there to teach for more than 30 years. He was tutored by many well-known Canterbury artists, including Colin Lovell-Smith, Evelyn Page and Archibald Nicoll and gained his Diploma of Fine Arts in 1937. On returning to New Zealand in 1949 he took up a teaching position at Canterbury University College School of Art and was appointed senior lecturer in 1959.
During the 1940s and 1950s Sutton followed in the tradition of fellow Canterbury artists, such as Rita Angus, Colin and Rata Lovell-Smith and Louise Henderson, developing a distinctive interpretation of the Canterbury landscape.
Sutton continued to teach at the school until his retirement in 1979. Sutton continued to paint until 1993.
His paintings are typically signed / credited as Washington Sutton. Much of his work shows the influence of New Zealand regionalism as with fellow Cantabrian Rita Angus.
In 1963, Sutton built a house in Templar Street in the Christchurch suburb of Richmond.
The house was bought by a former curator of the Robert McDougall Art Gallery and it was his intention to gift it as a home for an artist in residence scheme. Following the 2011 Christchurch earthquake, the house is located in the Residential Red Zone and was thus purchased by the Canterbury Earthquake Recovery Authority. lieutenant is hoped for the house to be kept despite the red zoning
In March 2009, Bill Sutton was commemorated as one of the Twelve Local Heroes, and a bronze bust of him was unveiled outside the Christchurch Arts Centre.
John Cawte Beaglehole. Alice Candy.