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GP who had his stethoscope turned into Surrealist art

Jeffrey Sherwin is proof that you do not need megabucks to be an important art collector.

September 9, 2009 16:34
Jeffrey and Ruth Sherwin at home

By Julia Weiner , Julia Weiner

3 min read

Jewish collectors lead the field in Britain when it comes to contemporary art — Charles Saatchi, Anita Zabludowicz and Frank Cohen have all opened galleries featuring selections from their extensive collections. However, all three are multimillionaires. So is it possible to build up an important art collection on a more modest salary?

One man who proves you can is retired Leeds GP Jeffrey Sherwin who, with his wife Ruth, has over the past 20 years or so put together the country’s largest collection of British Surrealism. Comprising over 220 paintings, drawings, sculptures and mixed media works, it is a collection of national importance that is currently on display at Leeds City Art Gallery.

Sherwin’s mother was an amateur artist, a sculpture by whom he displays next to one by Sir Eduardo Paolozzi. But he really became interested in art at Oxford where he studied medicine, although he had an ulterior motive for buying his first paintings. “My bed-cum-settee was pushed against the wall. I decided that if I had some pictures behind the settee it might encourage my girlfriends to crawl on to it to have a closer look. I went up to London and bought some pictures from Hyde Park railings and hung them on the wall. When I look back at that time I am really rather embarrassed, not at the subterfuge but at the poor quality of the paintings.”

He describes most of his early purchases as “rubbish” and it was only in 1986 that he first became interested in the British Surrealists following an exhibition on the subject at Leeds City Art Gallery. He has no clever explanation for his conversion. “It sounds banal but I found the works very interesting,” he explains. “Surrealism in its simplest terms takes the ‘everyday’ and turns it on its head. The thing about Surrealism is that you can recognise the images but there is an intellectual twist.”