Selby Whittingham
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Selby Whittingham (born 8 August 1941 in Batu Gajah, Malaysia) is an art expert in London who has specialized in the work of J. M. W. Turner.[1][2][3] Whittingham is a consultant to museums and institutions.[4] He is the secretary and founder of The Independent Turner Society[5][6] and is the author of a number of books about art and museums.[7]
Whittingham was born in Batu Gajah, Malaysia.[4] He was baptised Jeremy Selby Whittingham Oppenheim in 1941 in Malaya, but dropped the name "Oppenheim" soon after by deed poll due to anti-German feeling then.[citation needed] His father, Henry Rolf Oppenheim (1902–1987), escaped from Singapore in a sampan with the Australian Major-General Gordon Bennett to India, an escape which became the subject of a parliamentary question to Winston Churchill.[8][citation needed] Whittingham's uncle, Sir Duncan Oppenheim, besides his life in business, was an artist and Chairman of the Design Council and of the Royal College of Art as well as a member of the V&A Advisory Council. His mother, Barbara Whittingham-Jones, was admitted to the bar at Gray's Inn. She was involved in politics with Randolph Churchill, and subsequently worked in journalism and as a historian, but died aged 51.[9][10] [See 2021 Wikipedia entry on mother, Barbara Whittingham-Jones]
Education
Whittingham was educated at Shrewsbury School and Oriel College, Oxford, then at University of Manchester. After Shrewsbury he filled his semi-gap year by attending the French Civilisation Course at the Sorbonne, University of Paris, and as an assistant at the National Portrait Gallery at the invitation of the Director.[citation needed] At Oxford he studied Mods and Greats of Literae Humaniores (classics). He was awarded a Ph.D. at the University of Manchester for a thesis on realism in medieval portraiture.[4]