Ben Uri company logo
Ben Uri
Skip to main content
  • Menu
  • Homepage
  • About Ben Uri
  • What's on
  • Visit Us
  • Exhibitions
  • Collections
  • Research Unit - resources
  • BU TV
  • Podcasts
  • Shop
  • Kids Programme
  • Arts and Mental Health
  • Support Us
  • Contact Us
  • Charity art and book sale
Facebook, opens in a new tab.
Youtube, opens in a new tab.
Instagram, opens in a new tab.
Twitter-x, opens in a new tab.
LinkedIn, opens in a new tab.
Send an email
Cart
0 items £
Checkout

Item added to cart

View cart & checkout
Continue shopping
Facebook, opens in a new tab.
Youtube, opens in a new tab.
Instagram, opens in a new tab.
Twitter-x, opens in a new tab.
LinkedIn, opens in a new tab.
Send an email
Menu
Artworks in the collection

Gender

  • All
  • Collections
    • Core Collection
    • Pre-Eminent Collection
  • Émigré artists
  • Gender
    • Female
    • Male
    • Non-binary
  • Materials and techniques
    • Lithographs, etchings, prints
    • Oil and acrylic
    • Watercolour, pastel, drawings
  • Object type
    • Ceramic
    • Paintings
    • Photography
    • Sculpture
    • Textiles
    • Video
    • Works on paper
  • Year of birth
    • 1880–1899
    • 1900–1919
    • 1920–1939
    • 1940–1959
    • 1960–1979
    • 1980–2000
    • Before 1880
  • Year of death
    • 1880–1899
    • 1900–1919
    • 1920–1939
    • 1940–1959
    • 1960–1979
    • 1980–2000
    • After 2000
Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Lancelot Ribeiro, King Lear, 1964

Lancelot Ribeiro 1933-2010

King Lear, 1964
oil on canvas
99 x 52.7 cm
signed (lower right) Ribeiro '64
2022-17

Further images

  • (View a larger image of thumbnail 1 ) Thumbnail of additional image
  • King Lear
Ribeiro’s bold image of King Lear – his spiky crown reminiscent of Christ’s crown of thorns but also echoing the sharp-edged architectural forms in the artist's early townscapes – relates...
Read more

Ribeiro’s bold image of King Lear – his spiky crown reminiscent of Christ’s crown of thorns but also echoing the sharp-edged architectural forms in the artist's early townscapes – relates both to Shakespeare’s troubled king and to the Christian imagery that peopled Ribeiro’s early work. This drew on his Catholic upbringing and education, particularly the harsh regime he endured at St Mary’s Senior Cambridge School Mount Abu (Rajputana) run by Irish Christian brothers in Rajasthan, which he attended between the ages of 9 and 11. In a review of his 1961 Bombay exhibition Ribeiro listed the types of portrait heads he painted at this time as: ‘colonialists, kings, tyrants, Christ (resurrected), tycoons, women and thugs’ (cited ‘Restless Ribeiro’, 2013, p. 38). They included an earlier Untitled image of Christ with a crown of thorns and stigmata, executed in a monochrome palette, in 1961. Through these 'portraits' he explored concepts of power and evil, presenting his subjects facing the viewer in dramatic close up.


Ribeiro’s half-brother, the painter F. N. Souza, who also frequently drew on Christian imagery, used a similarly dramatic contrast of a Black figure against a white backdrop in his ‘Negro in Mourning’ (1957, Birmingham), painted at the time of London’s Notting Hill race riots. Ribeiro's Lear was painted in 1964, the year of the British General Election, which followed the 1962 Act controlling the previous liberal postwar immigration policy, and his own response in co-founding the Indian Painters' Collective, UK (IPC) in 1963. Against this backdrop, King Lear, could also be read as one of a series of self-portraits. An extract from an article on Ribeiro's 1965 Hampstead exhibition related the following encounter: ‘Looking curiously at a painting of a man with a long, lopsided face, a distorted mouth and a strange coloured complexion, I asked the artist what it was. ‘A self portrait’, he answered!' (cited Restless Ribeiro, p. 30).


In the accompanying catalogue to the posthumous 2013 'Restless Ribeiro' exhibition, the artist's friend, Indian poet, translator and critic R. Parthasarathy observed that Ribeiro's ‘true subject’ was his ‘origins – Goan roots, estrangement from India, and exile in London. How does a human being come to terms with multiple histories and in the process achieve wholeness’.

Close full details

Provenance

Presented by the Estate of Lancelot Ribeiro 2022
Share
  • Facebook
  • X
  • Pinterest
  • Tumblr
  • Email
Previous
|
Next
699 
of  887

Be the first to know – Sign Up

Sign up

* denotes required fields

This website uses cookies to improve your experience. If you are not happy with this, you can opt-out below. 

 

Read More

VISIT US

108a Boundary Road, St John’s Wood, London, NW8 0RH

Now open Wednesday to Friday 10 am - 5.30 pm

Please check the dates on What's on.

admin@benuri.org

 

 

Homepage

What’s On

About

Contact

Support

Exhibitions

Collections

Research Unit

Essays / Catalogues

Loans 

BU TV

Podcasts

Health

Kids

Press

Facebook, opens in a new tab.
Instagram, opens in a new tab.
Twitter-x, opens in a new tab.
Youtube, opens in a new tab.
Pinterest, opens in a new tab.
LinkedIn, opens in a new tab.
Vimeo, opens in a new tab.
Artsy, opens in a new tab.
Send an email
Privacy Policy
Accessibility Policy
Manage cookies
Copyright © 2025 Ben Uri
Site by Artlogic

We use cookies to make our website work more efficiently, to provide you with more personalised services or advertising, and to analyse traffic on our website. For more information please read our cookies policy. If you don't agree to the use of our cookies, the quality of your experience of our website may be lessened.

Manage cookies
Accept

Cookie preferences

Check the boxes for the cookie categories you allow our site to use

Cookie options
Required for the website to function and cannot be disabled.
Improve your experience on the website by storing choices you make about how it should function.
Allow us to collect anonymous usage data in order to improve the experience on our website.
Allow us to identify our visitors so that we can offer personalised, targeted marketing.
Save preferences
Close

Be the first to know – Sign Up

Subscribe to our newsletter and be the first to know about everything new at Ben Uri, including the constantly evolving and expansive online content across our exhibitions, collection and research.

 

We value and respect your privacy. Your personal data will be kept private and processed securely, according to our Privacy Policy. If you change your mind anytime, you can unsubscribe directly when receiving a mail from us (the link will be at the bottom of the email) or contact us.

Sign up

* denotes required fields

This website uses cookies to improve your experience. If you are not happy with this, you can opt-out below. 

 

Read More


EnglishFrenchGermanItalianPortugueseRussianSpanish