Rupert Gunnis Archive

Selection of material from the Rupert Gunnis Archive, including notes written by Gunnis; a letter written by Rupert Gunnis to his brother Nigel; a photograph of Gunnis used as a postcard; and an annoted photograph, 'The Four Kings'.
Leeds Museums & Galleries (Henry Moore Institute Archive)
Courtesy of the Gunnis Estate.
Photo: George Booth

Rupert Gunnis's passport.
Leeds Museums & Galleries (Henry Moore Institute Archive)
Courtesy of the Gunnis Estate.
Photo: George Booth
Two drawings of memorial plaques, possibly by Rupert Gunnis.
Leeds Museums & Galleries (Henry Moore Institute Archive)
Courtesy of the Gunnis Estate.
Photo: George Booth
A page from Rupert Gunnis's scrapbook 'Historic Cyprus' showing press cuttings related to sculpture.
Leeds Museums & Galleries (Henry Moore Institute Archive)
Courtesy of the Gunnis Estate.
Photo: George Booth
Pages from Rupert Gunnis's Diary, 1927.
Leeds Museums & Galleries (Henry Moore Institute Archive)
Courtesy of the Gunnis Estate.
Photo: George Booth
Christmas card sent by Rupert Gunnis in 1930.
Leeds Museums & Galleries (Henry Moore Institute Archive)
Courtesy of the Gunnis Estate.
Photo: George Booth
The personal archive of art historian and collector Rupert Forbes Gunnis (1899 - 1965), has recently been acquired by the HMI Archive.
Gunnis is well-known for this ‘Dictionary of British Sculptors 1660-1851’, published in 1953, which was the result of many years of dedicated research by Gunnis and a team of helpers. A revised edition was recently published with the support of the HMI, and the Archive holds papers relating to both the first edition, and revision project.
Within the archive are many papers that document Gunnis’s life and work, from childhood through to the months leading up to his death in June 1965, the majority of which were written, collected or compiled by Gunnis himself. From an early age, the papers show Gunnis was a keen writer and collector of information, later finding antiquities and sculpture as the focus for his interests.
The collection also includes photograph albums, drawings, press-cuttings, scrapbooks, journals, correspondence and diaries, and is particularly rich in relation to his period of colonial service when in Cyprus from 1926-1939 where he was a founder of the Cyprus Museum and wrote ‘Historic Cyprus’.
This collection is currently in the process of being re-packaged and catalogued and will be available for consultation by researchers soon. For further information please contact Claire Mayoh, Archivist.