Biography
Painter, designer and illustrator born in Glasgow. He began
painting at the age of 14, left school at 16 to paint, but was
too young to enter the local School of Art, although he attended
life classes there.
In 1940
he held a joint exhibition with Douglas Campbell at a trade
union club, where Josef Herman and Jankel Adler gave encouragement
- Creme subsequently went on to study with Adler for several
years. In 1942 Creme and Robert Frame illustrated W S Graham's
poem's Cage Without Grievance.
Creme
moved to London in 1946, where he met John Minton, Prunella
Clough and Keith Vaughan. In the mid-1940's Tyrone Guthrie commissioned
Creme to do the sets for his production of Carmen.
It was at this time that Creme started to exhibit widely with
AIA, London Group, Gimpel Fils, Redfern gallery and Leger Galleries.
A visit
to southern France in 1950 prompted Creme to adopt a lighter
palette and to move more towards abstraction. He had a one-man
show at Gallery Apollinaire in 1952 and began to exhibit in
America. Other solo shows include St. George's Gallery, 1955;
Bryant M Hale Gallery, Los Angeles, 1964; and Dartington New
Gallery, 1977.
Jane
England organised a major retrospective in 1985 and continued
to exhibit him thereafter. In additon to his painting he has
been a long time lecturer and advocate of the mission of Maitreya
the Christ.
Victoria
& Albert Museum and British Museum amongst others hold examples
of his work.