John Hutton (8 August 1906 – 1978) was a prominent glass engraving artist from New Zealand, who spent most of his career in the United Kingdom. He is best known for the Great West Screen he created for Coventry Cathedral following WWII.
Life
Born in Clyde on the South Island of New Zealand in 1906, Hutton married fellow artist Helen (Nell) Blair in 1934 and they made England their permanent home in 1936. They lived for a while in an artists' commune at Assington Hall in Suffolk. John worked on several mural commissions until the war broke out in 1939.
During the war he joined a camouflage unit where he met and worked with the architect Basil Spence – a relationship which was to prove invaluable later on. In 1947 he designed his first large scale glass engravings – a series of four panels depicting the seasons for the restaurant area on the Cunard ship Caronia. By 1953 he had developed a unique method of engraving using a grinding wheel attached to a flexible drive.[1]
John and Helen had three children: Warwick Hutton, an artist, Macaillan Hutton, an architect, and Peter Hutton, a teacher.
John had used an artist's model, Marigold Dodson, to pose for many of the figures in his artwork. His first marriage ended during this period and he married Dodson in 1963, though he still did work with his former wife subsequently on joint art projects. Hutton and Dodson had one daughter, Katie Hutton.[2]
Hutton worked on until 1978 when he died of cancer. His ashes were buried beneath a stone at the foot of his finest work – the screen at Coventry Cathedral.[3]
Commissions
Coventry Cathedral
Part of the Coventry Cathedral Great West Screen. The pane smashed in January 2020 is bottom left in this picture.
Hutton is most famous for his glass engravings on the Great West Screen of Coventry Cathedral, known as the Screen of Saints and Angels, 66 larger-than-life figures which took ten years to create, including the angel of annunciation, the angel of the resurrection and the angel of the measuring rod). They received instant acclaim when unveiled in 1962.
A pane of the window, depicting The Angel with the Eternal Gospel, was smashed during a burglary in January 2020.[4][5]
Guildford Cathedral
He designed and engraved six larger-than-life angels for the West doors of Guildford Cathedral, Surrey, and designed three angels over the south transept doors.
In January 2024 one of these was smashed in an act of apparent vandalism.[6]
Hutton created glass engravings of the National Library and Archives in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada: 37 panels over three floors with a principal theme of world literature including larger-than-life figures of Cervantes, Shakespeare, Molière and Tolstoy. He also made engravings of Apollo and the Nine Muses.
In 1975 Hutton designed 'The Spirit of Thanksgiving' for Thanks-Giving Square in Dallas, Texas, his first large project in the United States. Above the entryway to the non-denominational Chapel of Thanksgiving a large engraved window features a deeply-cut, three dimensional dove surrounded by circular surface effects. Representing the divine in some religions, Hutton said that "the dove is a symbol used throughout history to depict beauty, peace, hope and thanksgiving."[8]
Bucklersbury House
In 1960, John Hutton created 24 panels to commemorate the discovery of the ruins of the Temple of Mithras on the site of the now demolished Bucklersbury House. In 2015 the panels were relocated to the new entrance to Bank station, beneath the Bloomberg building.[9]
Wellington Cathedral
At New Zealand's Wellington Cathedral, the narthex is separated from the nave by a glass wall bearing Hutton's trumpet-playing angels, who are similar to the Coventry Cathedral angels in its Screen of Saints and Angels.[10]
At the Civic Centre of Newcastle upon Tyne, he created a glass screen representing some of the great inventions of the city, and figures from local mythology, with his son, Warwick Hutton.
One of three carved glass angels for the south porch of Guildford Cathedral
Dunkirk glass memorial
Books
Brentnall, Margaret and Marigold Hutton. John Hutton: Artist and Glass Engraver. Philadelphia: The Art Alliance Press, 1986. Several appendices document Hutton's work (mural paintings, glass and other media; U.S. installations include one at Corning Museum of Glass and two in Texas). Hard cover, 216 pages ISBN0-87982-502-2
George Thomas Noszlopy. Public sculpture of Warwickshire, Coventry and Solihull, Series: Liverpool University Press – Public Sculpture of Britain, ISBN978-0-85323-847-8 . Published March 2003. P.54-55: Entrance to the Shakespeare's Birthplace Trust Gallery in Stratford upon Avon – Characters from the Works of Shakespeare (Hutton's glass engravings)
Hutton,John The West Window at Coventry Cathedral English Counties Periodicals Ltd, ?1962, 29 pages, illustrated.