Ronald Egerton Balfour

Ronald Egerton Balfour (1896–1941) or professionally as Ronald Balfour was a British Illustrator and costume designer, best remembered for being the husband of Deirdre Hart-Davis and his Beardsleyesque depiction of the well known Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam published in 1920.[1][2]

Ronald Egerton Balfour
Balfour and Deirdre Hart-Davis (1929)
Born6 August 1896
Died1 January 1941(1941-01-01) (aged 44)
OccupationIllustrator
Known forIllustrating Rubaiyat (1920)

Biography edit

Balfour was born at Hamilton, Lanarkshire in Scotland to the wealthy Anglo-Indian Balfour family, the son of Brigadier–General Sir Alfred Granville Balfour (1858-1936) and Agnes Frances Elizabeth Balfour (d.1936). His cousin was also Arthur Balfour, Prime Minister of the United Kingdom between 1902 and 1905. By 1901, the Balfour family resided in Westminster and from 1914 on, in Chelsea. By 1915, Balfour joined the Royal Navy as a midshipman returning in 1919 to the family home in Chelsea.[3]

Balfour appears to have begun sketching during his time in the Navy between 1916 and 1919.[4] Balfour began his career as a commercial artist after the Great War as a costumer designer publishing his work in the likes of Tatler Magazine.[5] By 1921 with the well received publication of his Rubaiyat, Balfour opened his own studio.[6] Balfour also became involved as a Manager in Standard Oil.[7] In 1930, he married the socialite and 'Bright Young Thing' Deirdre Phyllis Ulrica Hart–Davis with whom he had two daughters, Susan (b.1931) and Annabel (b.1935).[8][9] After 1934 he also worked in the film industry as a costume designer, making sketches for Anna May Wongs costume in the Java Head.[10][11] Balfour was also known to design his wife's dresses as well.[12] Balfour would die on 16 April 1941 in a car crash on the way to his country house, by way of Kingston Bypass, due to falling asleep at the wheel.[13]

Illustrated works edit

  • Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam Constable & Co (1920, 1922, 1930)
  • Christopher Marlowe Ernest Milton, Constable & Co (1924)
  • Thin air: A Himalayan Interlude Constance Bridges, Brewer & Warren Inc (1930)

Reprinted material edit

  • The Rubaiyat MAAR-sha (2005)

References edit

  1. ^ Studies in Illustration, Martin Steenson, Winter 2005-Spring 2006, No. 31-32, p.34–37, Imaginative Book Illustration Society
  2. ^ Studies in Illustration, Martin Steenson, 2007, Issue 36, pp.23–25, IBIS
  3. ^ National Archives, ADM/337/119/676
  4. ^ Studies in Illustration, Martin Steenson, Winter 2005-Spring 2006, No. 31-32, p.34–37, Imaginative Book Illustration Society
  5. ^ The Passing Shows, The Tatler, February 26, 1919, p.92
  6. ^ Westminster Gazette, 2 April 1921, p.4
  7. ^ Studies in Illustration, Martin Steenson, 2007, Issue 36, pp.23–25, IBIS
  8. ^ Studies in Illustration, Martin Steenson, Winter 2005-Spring 2006, No. 31-32, p.34–37, Imaginative Book Illustration Society
  9. ^ Studies in Illustration, Martin Steenson, 2007, Issue 36, pp.23–25, IBIS
  10. ^ The Sketch, Marie Gold, 30 May 1934, p17
  11. ^ Victoria and Albert Museum, Accession Number E.3165-1934
  12. ^ Society, Daily Mirror, Saturday 29 February 1936, p.9
  13. ^ Artist Officer Dead After Accident, April 19, 1941, p.3, Manchester Evening News