Biography
Painter of near abstract landscapes and figures in oils; sculptor.
Born in Vienna, he fled to England in 1938. In 1943 he joined
the army and served in France, Holland and Germany until 1948.
He studied
at Dusseldorf Academy 1948-9, and returned to London to study
at St Martin’s School of Art 1949-53. He participated in many
group shows including Six Young Contemporaries, Gimpel Fils,
London 1951 and 1953; Pittsburgh International Exhibition, 1961;
British Painting in the Sixties, Contemporary Arts Society;
British Art Today, San Francisco Museum of Art; The Tokyo International
Biennale, 1974; and British Art ’74 at the Hayward.
He had
one-man shows at Arthur Tooth & Sons and Gimpel Fils, London,
Paul Rosenberg & Co., New York, The Bluecoat Society of Arts,
Liverpool, and a retrospective at the Museum of Modern Art,
Oxford in 1982.
Prizewinner
at John Moores, Liverpool in 1969, his works are in the Tate
Gallery and Arts Council collections, and in galleries in the
USA, Australia and Brazil.
Kinley
taught at St.Martin’s, Wimbledon and Bath. Influenced by De
Stael, and a friend of Howard Hodgkin, Kinley paints simple
stylised figures on brightly coloured grounds, in thick textured
paint, using a palette knife.