Anthony Blunt

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Anthony Blunt
Allegiance Soviet Union Soviet Union
Codename(s) Johnson
Birth name Anthony Frederick Blunt
Born 26 September 1907(1907-09-26)
Bournemouth, Dorset, United Kingdom
Died 26 March 1983 (aged 75)
Westminster, London, United Kingdom
Nationality British
Profession Art historian, professor, writer, spy
Alma mater Trinity College, Cambridge

Anthony Frederick Blunt (26 September 1907 – 26 March 1983),[1] was a British art historian exposed as a Soviet spy.

Blunt was Professor of the History of Art at the University of London, director of the Courtauld Institute of Art, Surveyor of the King's Pictures and London. Known as Sir Anthony Blunt, KCVO between 1956 and 1979), he was exposed as a member of the Cambridge Five, a group of spies working for the Soviet Union from some time in the 1930s to at least the early 1950s.

Contents

[edit] Early life

Blunt was born in Bournemouth, the third and youngest son of a vicar, the Revd (Arthur) Stanley Vaughan Blunt (1870–1929) and his wife, Hilda Violet (1880–1969), daughter of Henry Master of the Madras civil service. He was the brother of writer Wilfrid Jasper Walter Blunt and of numismatist Christopher Evelyn Blunt, and the grandnephew of poet Wilfrid Scawen Blunt.

Blunt is frequently spoken of as a distant relative of Queen Mary (Mary of Teck) – generally Prince Michael of Hesse is given as their common cousin – however, the exact lineage is never produced. He was, however, demonstrably a cousin of Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon, the late Queen Mother, through his mother, Hilda V. Master, daughter of John Henry Master, son of Frances Mary Smith, sister of Oswald Smith, father of Frances Dora Smith, mother of Claude George Bowes-Lyon, 14th Earl of Strathmore and Kinghorne, father of Elizabeth Angela Marguerite Bowes-Lyon, making Blunt and the Queen Mother third cousins, by common descent from George Smith and his wife Frances Mary Mosley.[2]

Blunt's vicar father was assigned to Paris with the British Embassy chapel, and so moved his family to the French capital for several years during Blunt's childhood period. The young Anthony became fluent in French, and experienced intensely the artistic culture closely available to him, stimulating an interest which would last a lifetime and form the basis for his later career.[3]

He was educated at Marlborough College, where he joined the College's secret 'Society of Amici'[4], in which he was a contemporary of Louis MacNeice (whose unfinished autobiography The Strings are False contains numerous references to Blunt), John Betjeman and Graham Shepard.

[edit] Cambridge University

He later read mathematics at Trinity College, Cambridge, and earned his first degree in that subject[5], but he switched to Modern Languages, eventually graduating in 1930 with a First Class degree, and became a teacher of French. He became a Fellow of the college in 1932, and pursued graduate research in art history and traveled frequently to continental Europe in connection with his studies.[3] Like Guy Burgess Blunt was known to be homosexual[6].

[edit] Soviet espionage

[edit] Beginnings

While a Cambridge don, he was a member of the Cambridge Apostles, a largely Marxist secret society formed from students, alumni and professors of Cambridge University. After visiting the Soviet Union in 1933, Blunt was recruited in 1934 by the NKVD. Blunt remained at Cambridge and served as a talent-spotter. He may have identified Burgess, Kim Philby, Donald Maclean, and John Cairncross, who were all Cambridge friends a few years younger than himself, as potential espionage recruits for the Soviets.[3] But Blunt himslef said in his public confession that it was Burgess who converted him to the Soviet cause.

[edit] Joining MI5

With the onset of World War II, Blunt joined the British Army in 1939, briefly saw limited action in France in the intelligence corps up to the Nazi invasion there in May 1940, was then evacuated from Dunkirk, and later in 1940 was recruited to MI5, the Security Service.[3]. He passed on ULTRA intelligence from decrypted Enigma intercepts to the Soviet Union, which were passed to him by John Cairncross another of the Cambridge Five. They concerned the German preparations and detailed plans for the Battle of Kursk, the last descisive encounter on the Eastern Front. Malcolm Muggeridge,himself a wartime British agent, recalls meeting Philby and Victor, later Lord Rothschild, who had met Philby and Blunt at Trinity College, Cambridge. He reported that at the Paris meeting in late 1955 Rothshchild argued that much more Ultra material should have been given to Stalin. For once, Philby reportedly dropped his reserve, and agreed.[7]

During the war, Blunt attained the rank of major.[8]In the final days of World War II, Blunt successfully undertook a special mission to the defeated Germany on behalf of the British royal family, to recover incriminating letters written by the Duke of Windsor to Adolf Hitler.[9] The mission may have also recovered the so-called Vicky Letters, between Queen Victoria and some of her German relatives.[8]

[edit] Suspicion and secret confession

Following the defection of fellow spies Burgess and Maclean to the Soviet Union in May 1951, Blunt came under suspicion as well. He had been a longtime friend of Burgess, from their time at Cambridge. Maclean was in imminent danger of being unmasked as a spy by decryptions from VENONA. Blunt was interrogated by MI5 in 1952, but gave little, if anything, away.[10]

In January 1964, Arthur S. Martin from MI5 interviewed Michael Straight (later owner and editor of The New Republic and chairman of the National Endowment for the Arts), an American who had studied at Trinity College, Cambridge, and who had become friends there with Blunt, Kim Philby, Donald Maclean and Guy Burgess. Straight claimed that Blunt had tried to recruit him to become a Soviet spy. Arthur Martin and Jim Skardon had interviewed Blunt eleven times since 1951, but Blunt admitted nothing. Martin, now equipped with Straight's story, went to see Blunt again and this time Blunt made a confession. Queen Elizabeth II was informed shortly thereafter.[11] He admitted to being a Soviet agent and named John Cairncross, Peter Ashby, Brian Symon and Leo Long as spies he had recruited. In return for Blunt's full confession, the British government agreed to keep his spying career an official secret for fifteen years, and granted him full immunity from prosecution.[12] Martin himself was disappointed when it was discovered that MI5 Director-General Roger Hollis and Attorney General Sir John Hobson decided not to put Blunt on trial. He again argued that there was still a Soviet spy working at the centre of MI5, but Hollis thought Martin's suggestion was highly damaging to the organization, and ordered Martin to be suspended from duty, soon afterwards terminating his employment in MI5[13] and sending him to MI6. In Peter Wright's best-selling 1987 book Spycatcher, Wright argued that Hollis was the best fit for the possible Soviet spy in MI5 though authorities such as Peter Hennessy have shown there is little credence to this assertion.

[edit] Public exposure

Blunt's role as a Soviet agent was exposed – albeit under a false name – in Andrew Boyle's book, Climate of Treason in 1979 and he was publicly named by Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher in the same year.[14] Queen Elizabeth II stripped Blunt of his knighthood, and he was removed as an Honorary Fellow of Trinity College. Blunt himself claimed that he went into hiding in London and not abroad as has been suggested.[15] However, he returned to London, but may not have fully realized the strength of feeling against him until one day in February 1980, when he tried to see a film in Notting Hill and was booed out of the cinema. That same month, John Gaskin, his partner since 1953, threw himself from a sixth-floor balcony but survived. Blunt died from a heart attack at his home in London in 1983, aged 75.

According to MI5 papers released in 2002, the agency had been told by the writer Moura Budberg in 1950 that Blunt was a member of the Communist Party, but the information was ignored. According to Blunt himself, he never joined, because Burgess persuaded him that he would be more valuable to the anti-fascist crusade by working with Burgess. After his BBC Television confession at the age of 72, he broke down in tears. [16]

[edit] Memoirs

In October 2001, the BBC reported that an autobiographical memoir written by Blunt during 1979–83 describing his life and his time as a spy, through to his exposure by Margaret Thatcher's government in 1979, was being held in the British Library. At the time of handing it in, the anonymous donor had insisted that it was not to be released for another 25 years.[17] It was finally made available to readers on 23 July 2009.[18]

In the manuscript, Blunt conceded that spying for Communist Russia was "the biggest mistake of his life":[19]

"What I did not realise is that I was so naïve politically that I was not justified in committing myself to any political action of this kind. The atmosphere in Cambridge was so intense, the enthusiasm for any anti-fascist activity was so great, that I made the biggest mistake of my life."[20]

Although urged to defect like Maclean, Burgess and Philby, Blunt states that he "realised quite clearly that I would take any risk in [Britain], rather than go to Russia."[19] After he was publicly exposed, he claims to have considered suicide but instead turned to "whisky and concentrated work".[19]

[edit] Career as an art historian

Throughout the time of his activities in espionage, Blunt's public career was in the History of Art, a field in which he gained prominence. In 1940, most of his fellowship dissertation was published under the title of Artistic Theories in Italy, 1450-1600. In 1945, he was given the esteemed position of Surveyor of the King's Pictures, and later the Queen’s Pictures (after the death of King George VI in 1952), one of the largest private collections in the world. He held the position for 27 years, was knighted as a KCVO in 1956 for his work in the role, and his contribution was vital in the expansion and cataloguing of the Queen’s Gallery, which opened in 1962.

In 1947 he became both Professor of the History of Art at the University of London, and the director of the Courtauld Institute of Art, University of London, where he had been lecturing since the spring of 1933,[21] and where his tenure in office as director lasted until 1974. This position included the use of a live-in apartment on the premises.[22] During his 27 years at the Courtauld Institute, Blunt was respected as a dedicated teacher, a kind superior to his staff. His legacy at the Courtauld was to have left it with a larger staff, increased funding, and more space, and his role was central in the acquisition of outstanding collections for the Courtauld's Galleries. He is often credited for making the Courtauld what it is today, as well as for pioneering art history in Britain, and for training the next generation of British art historians.

In 1953, Blunt published his book Art and Architecture in France, 1500-1700, and he was in particular an expert on the works of Nicolas Poussin, writing numerous books and articles about the painter, and serving as curator for a landmark exhibition of Poussin at the Louvre in 1960, which was an enormous success.[23] He did not, however, limit his research in the areas of Italian art and French art, but also wrote on topics as diverse as William Blake, Pablo Picasso, the Galleries of England, Scotland, and Wales. He also catalogued the French drawings (1945), G. B. Castiglione and Stefano della Bella drawings (1954) Roman drawings (with H. L. Cooke, 1960) and Venetian (with Edward Croft Murray, 1957) drawings in the collection of the Queen, as well as a supplement of Addenda and Corrigenda to the Italian catalogues (in E. Schilling's German Drawings).He attended a summer school in Sicily in 1965, leading to a deep interest in Sicilian architecture, and in 1968 he wrote the only authoritative and in-depth book on Sicilian Baroque. From 1962 he was engaged in a dispute with Denis Mahon regarding the authenticity of a Poussin work which rumbled on for several years. Mahon was shown to be correct. Blunt was also unaware that a painting in his own possession was also by Poussin.[24]. It has been suggested that Blunt could not accept that Poussin may have produced inferior work.

Notable students who have been influenced by Anthony Blunt include Brian Sewell (an art critic for the Evening Standard),[25] Ron Bloore, Nicholas Serota, Neil Macgregor, the former editor of the Burlington magazine, former director of the National Gallery and the current director of the British Museum, John White (art historian), Sir Alan Bowness (who ran the Tate Gallery), John Golding (who wrote the first major book on Cubism), Reyner Banham (an influential architectural historian), John Shearman (the ‘world expert’ on Mannerism and the former Chair of the Art History Department at Harvard University), Melvin Day (former Director of National Art Gallery of New Zealand and Government Art Historian for New Zealand ), Christopher Newall (an expert on the Pre-Raphaelites), Michael Jaffé (an expert on Rubens), Michael Mahoney (former Curator of European Paintings at the National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C., and former Chair of the Art History Department at Trinity College, Hartford), Lee Johnson (an expert on Eugène Delacroix), and Anita Brookner (an art historian and novelist).

Among his many accomplishments, Blunt also received a series of honorary fellowships, became the National Trust picture advisor, put on exhibitions at the Royal Academy, edited and wrote numerous books and articles, and sat on every influential art committee.

[edit] Later life

After Mrs Thatcher announced Blunt’s espionage, he continued his art historical work by writing and publishing a Guide to Baroque Rome (1982) and completing a manuscript (apparently lost by the publisher after they sent it to a German art historian) on the architecture of Pietro da Cortona.

Many of his publications are still seen today by scholars as integral to the study of art history. His writing is lucid, and is based largely on art and architecture in context of their place in history. In his book Art and Architecture in France, for example, he begins each section with a brief depiction of the social, political and/or religious contexts in which works of art and art movements are emerging. And in Blunt’s Artistic Theory in Italy, 1450-1600, he clearly explains the motivational circumstances involved in the transitions between the High Renaissance and Mannerism. His ground-breaking work and logical method to art history have served as resources for many scholars, including Todd P. Olson and John Beldon Scott.

[edit] Works

A Festschrift Studies in Renaissance and Baroque Art presented to Anthony Blunt on his 60th Birthday, Phaidon 1967 (introduction by Ellis Waterhouse) contains a full list of his writings up to 1966.

Major works include:

Important articles after 1966:

[edit] Depictions in culture

A Question of Attribution is a play written by Alan Bennett about Blunt, covering the weeks before his public exposure as a spy, and his relationship with Queen Elizabeth II. After a successful run in London's West End, it was made into a television play directed by John Schlesinger and starring James Fox, Prunella Scales and Geoffrey Palmer. It was aired on the BBC in 1991. This play was seen as a companion to Bennett's 1983 television play about Guy Burgess, An Englishman Abroad.

Blunt: The Fourth Man is a 1985 film starring Ian Richardson, Anthony Hopkins, Michael Williams, and Rosie Kerslake, covering the events of 1951 when Guy Burgess and Donald Maclean went missing.

The Untouchable, a 1997 novel by John Banville, is a roman à clef based largely on the life and character of Anthony Blunt; the novel's protagonist, Victor Maskell, is a loosely disguised Blunt, although some elements of the character are based on Louis MacNeice.[26]

A Friendship of Convenience: Being a Discourse on Poussin's "Landscape With a Man Killed by a Snake", is a 1997 novel by Rufus Gunn set in 1956 in which Blunt, then Surveyor of the Queen's Pictures, encounters Joseph Losey, a film director fleeing McCarthyism.

Cambridge Spies is a 2003 four-part BBC television drama concerning the lives of the Cambridge Four from 1934 to the defection of Guy Burgess and Donald Maclean to the Soviet Union.

[edit] References

  1. ^ GRO Register of Deaths: MAR 1983 15 2186 WESTMINSTER - Anthony Frederick Blunt, DoB = 26 Sep 1907
  2. ^ Frances Mary Mosley at Genealogics
  3. ^ a b c d Anthony Blunt: His Lives, by Miranda Carter, 2001
  4. ^ Paths of Progress: A History of Marlborough College by Rt Hon Peter Brooke MP and Thomas Hinde
  5. ^ Spycatcher: The Candid Autobiography of a Senior Intelligence Officer, by Peter Wright, Toronto 1987, Stoddart Publishers.
  6. ^ [1]
  7. ^ Anthony Boyle (1979), The Climate of Treason, London: Hutchinson 
  8. ^ a b Anthony Blunt: His Lives, by Miranda Carter.
  9. ^ Spycatcher: The Autobiography of a Senior Intelligence Officer, by Peter Wright, 1987; The Duchess of Windsor: The Secret Life, by Charles Higham, 1988.
  10. ^ Anthony Blunt: His Lives, by Miranda Carter, 2001.
  11. ^ Peter Wright Spycatcher: The Candid Autobiography of a Senior Intelligence Officer, Melbourne: Heinemann, 1987.
  12. ^ Burns, John F. "Memoirs of British Spy Offer No Apology" The New York Times, 23 July 2009.
  13. ^ Miranda Carter - Anthony Blunt. His Lives Chapter 18
  14. ^ Margaret Thatcher's public statement to the House of Commons on Mr Anthony Blunt, Hansard HC [974/402-10]
  15. ^ BBC
  16. ^ BBC Television. November 20 1979.
  17. ^ "Spy's secret memoir 'held in library'". BBC News. 2001-10-20. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/1610313.stm. Retrieved 2010-04-25. 
  18. ^ British Library | UK | Anthony Blunt memoir becomes available in British Library Reading Rooms
  19. ^ a b c BBC website: Blunt's Soviet spying 'a mistake'
  20. ^ Daily Telegraph: "Anthony Blunt: confessions of spy who passed secrets to Russia during the war"
  21. ^ [2]
  22. ^ Conspiracy of Silence: The Secret Life of Anthony Blunt, by Barrie Penrose and Simon Freeman, 1987.
  23. ^ Miranda Carter Anthony Blunt: His Lives, 2001.
  24. ^ Miranda Carter
  25. ^ Cooke, Rachel. "We pee on things and call it art". Guardian, November 13, 2005. Retrieved on November 30, 2008.
  26. ^ Mullan, John. "Artifice and intelligence". Guardian, February 11, 2006. Retrieved on November 30, 2008.

[edit] Bibliography

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Court offices
Preceded by
Kenneth Clark
Surveyor of the Queen's Pictures
1945–1973
Succeeded by
Oliver Millar
Academic offices
Preceded by
T. S. R. Boase
Director of the Courtauld Institute of Art
1947–1974
Succeeded by
Peter Lasko
Preceded by
John Pope-Hennessy
Slade Professor of Fine Art,
Cambridge University

1965
Succeeded by
John Summerson
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