EQ Nicholson was an English painter and textile designer.
Background
Born Elsie Queen Myers in London, EQ was the daughter of novelist Leo Myers and his American-born wife Elsie Mellen Palmer. Her sister Eveleen was born in 1910. Her father frequented writers and artists including members of the Bloomsbury Group, the sculptor Frank Dobson and the painter Cedric Morris.
In 1931, EQ married the architect Christopher "Kit" Nicholson, youngest son of the painter William Nicholson and Mabel Pryde, and brother to Ben Nicholson and Nancy Nicholson.
Career
Leo Myers committed suicide on 7 April 1944 by taking an overdose of Veronal. Kit Nicholson died of injuries following a glider crash in Italy on 28 July 1948. EQ died in London in 1992.
EQ trained briefly at the Slade School of Fine Arts under Henry Tonks before studying batik in Paris in 1926.
She later worked in batik as an assistant to Marion Dorn. She also designed rugs.
When she was 20 she designed the interior of the new family home at Leckhampton House. EQ designed the interiors of Nicholson"s building for the London Gliding Club at Dunstable in 1936.
EQ"s designs from this time include Black Goose (1936), Daisy and Seaweed (1949).
Some of these designs were later screen-printed by Edinburgh Weavers. One of her best-known designs is Runner Bean, which dates from about 1950, and was used in Hugh Casson"s furnishing of the Royal Yacht and for hand-printed wallpapers by Cole & Son. The archive of the Whitworth Art Gallery, Manchester, includes a collection of EQ"s drawings and textiles.
Some of her designs are still being commercially produced.
Foreign a period of only about fifteen years from about 1941, EQ worked intensely as a painter, in gouache, crayon and collage, in a style that owes something to Georges Braque, whom she greatly admired. She had one show, with Peter Rose Pulham (1910-1956) and Keith Vaughan (1912-1977), at the Hanover Gallery in 1950.
Works from this period are in the Tate, the New Hall Art Collection and the National Portrait Gallery. They have been compared to those of other artist-designers such as Edward Bawden (1903-1989) and Eric Ravilious (1903-1942).