Age, Biography and Wiki

Romeo Toogood was born on 6 May, 1902 in Belfast, County Antrim, is a Romeo Toogood ARCA HRUA was Ulster artist. Discover Romeo Toogood's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is he in this year and how he spends money? Also learn how he earned most of networth at the age of 64 years old?

Popular As N/A
Occupation N/A
Age 64 years old
Zodiac Sign Taurus
Born 6 May 1902
Birthday 6 May
Birthplace Belfast, County Antrim
Date of death 11 August, 1966
Died Place Belfast, County Antrim
Nationality Belfast

We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 6 May. He is a member of famous artist with the age 64 years old group.

Romeo Toogood Height, Weight & Measurements

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Dating & Relationship status

He is currently single. He is not dating anyone. We don't have much information about He's past relationship and any previous engaged. According to our Database, He has no children.

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Romeo Toogood Net Worth

His net worth has been growing significantly in 2023-2024. So, how much is Romeo Toogood worth at the age of 64 years old? Romeo Toogood’s income source is mostly from being a successful artist. He is from Belfast. We have estimated Romeo Toogood's net worth, money, salary, income, and assets.

Net Worth in 2024 $1 Million - $5 Million
Salary in 2024 Under Review
Net Worth in 2023 Pending
Salary in 2023 Under Review
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Source of Income artist

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Timeline

1902

Romeo Toogood ARCA HRUA (6 May 1902- 11 August 1966) was an Ulster artist and teacher who specialized in landscape painting.

Romeo Charles Toogood was born in Belfast on 6 May 1902.

He was the son of a stone-carver, Charles Toogood, who had moved from England to work on the construction of Belfast City Hall.

1922

Toogood began his professional training at Belfast School of Art in 1922 and graduated in 1925.

1925

Between the years 1925 and 1928 Toogood delivered evening classes at the College and amassed £300 which he took to the Royal College of Art in London to continue his studies.

His funds did not last the three years that Toogood had intended, therefore he successfully petitioned the College administrators to allow him to complete a year early.

1927

Toogood became a member of the Belfast Art Society in 1927.

He experimented with magic realism.

1930

Toogood returned to Belfast in 1930 where he was to enter his first teaching post in 1931 at Larne Technical School.

1932

He was married to Anne in 1932 and had four children, one of whom died at the age of six.

Toogood received a general education at Hillman Street Public Elementary School until he found work at the age of fourteen as a painter and decorator.

During this period, from 1932 onwards, he also taught at Dungannon Technical School.

1933

He moved to Down High School in 1933 and worked part-time until 1948.

In 1933 Toogood joined the newly formed Northern Ireland Guild of Artists inaugural exhibition at the State Buildings on Arthur Street, Belfast.

Exhibiting alongside old stalwarts William Conor, John Hunter, Morris Harding and Edward Mansfield, as well as the younger generation such as Colin Middleton, Kathleen Bridle and the sculptor Betty Clements.

Toogood showed a painting of Larne and three lino-cuts of which the critic in the Northern Whig stated that they "all have a vitality and purposefulness that are individual."

In the same year Toogood's 1933 oil, Dan Nancy's, Cushendun was displayed in an exhibition at the Mansion House in Dublin by the Haverty Trust, before becoming one of ten works donated to the Belfast Museum and Art Gallery.

1934

He presented three paintings with the Ulster Academy of Arts, the successor to the Belfast Art Society, in 1934, Islandmagee, Dungannon, and The Backyard, at the Old Museum Arts Centre. Of greater significance that year was when Toogood became a member of the avant-garde Ulster Unit, a close relation of Paul Nash's Unit One.

The group had evolved from the short-lived Ulster Society of Painters and included artists such as John Luke, Colin Middleton, Mercy Hunter, George MacCann and Crawford Mitchell.

They showed together on just one occasion at Locksley Hall, Belfast in December 1934.

SB Kennedy of the Ulster Museum listed Toogood as one of the most influential artists in the exhibition.

Toogood displayed two oils, one of which, The Backyard, was also shown at the Old Museum in the same month.

The second was an interior of a theatre, simply entitled Theatre.

In the catalogue Toogood set-out his artistic philosophy:

"The painter's aim, I think, is to find in nature some sense of formal order, and to translate the same in terms of form and colour into a pattern which relates to the size and shape of his canvas, the degree of abstraction used depending on the individual painter."

The critics were still talking of the 1934 exhibition of four years earlier, when the participants were re-united for a show in aid of the Youth Hostel Association, where the reviewer in the Northern Whig remarked,"'Not since Colin Middleton, Edward Mansfield, George MacCann, Romeo Toogood, and other young artists held their first exhibition in Belfast has there been so stimulating a show as that which Lady Cushendun opened yesterday in John Magee's Gallery, Donegall Square West.'"Toogood displayed a painting of Glencoe which the same reviewer refers to as "one [of] the most interesting in the exhibition, mainly because of its colouring and its naiveté."

1935

The Academy elected Toogood an associate in 1935, inaugurated with Kathleen Bridle, Colin Middleton, Helen Brett, Patrick Marrinan, Maurice Wilks and William St. John Glenn.

1936

In 1936 Toogood showed two paintings at the Royal Hibernian Academy, his only showing with the society.

He was also elected a member of ruling council at the Ulster Academy of Arts in 1936, and again in 1944.

The painting of Barge at Edenderry painted in 1936 depicts the private quay and well-known premises of John Shaw Brown & Sons, linen merchants.

It was donated to the Belfast Museum and Art Gallery in addition to fourteen works by John Luke, Mainie Jellett, Seán Keating, Charles Lamb, Nano Reid and others.

Barge at Edenderry was later immortalised in a poem of the same name by Robert Johnstone.

1940

The Haverty Trust founded by the Irish portrait painter Thomas Haverty purchased another of Toogood's paintings in 1940.

1943

Toogood contributed work to the Civil Defence Art Exhibition in 1943.

Gleno was accepted from 1,300 works submitted to the juried exhibition of which 720 were displayed at Belfast Museum and Art Gallery.

The painting was amongst twelve works including Markey Robinson's Bomb Crater in Eglington Street and Fire at the International, and James McCord's McAdam's Farm, forwarded to London for inclusion in the Civil Defence Exhibition on Bond Street that summer.

1944

Writing in a 1944 essay entitled Paint in Ulster the critic John Hewitt described Toogood's work:"'His colour is altogether quieter than Luke's; his shapes not so sharply formalised, his vision closer to normal representation. He prefers a high skyline or none at all, and a broad landscape in which the brown ploughed fields, the dark hedges and the meadows, the slate roofs and white-washed gables make a pleasing pattern of unemphatic but subtly related colour, organised mainly by manipulation of diagonal tensions.'"Toogood contributed two paintings in the October 1945 Ulster Academy exhibition, including a watercolour and an oil, which the Northern Whig's reviewer lists amongst the "notable" works.

1945

A month later on 30 November 1945, Toogood's son Jeremy died.

Toogood was to suffer from depression for the rest of his life and was to effect his early retirement.

1946

In 1946 the Council for the Encouragement of Music and Art purchased a painting by Toogood, in addition to works by other contemporary Ulster artists.