Grace Winifred PAILTHORPE, 18821971 (aged 88 years)

Name
Grace Winifred /PAILTHORPE/
Name prefix
Dr
Birth July 29, 1882 28 28
Occupation
Surgeon/Surrealist Painter

Birth of a brotherValdemar Douglas PAILTHORPE
September 1882 (aged 1 month)
Birth of a brotherAlexander Frank PAILTHORPE
September 1884 (aged 2 years)
Birth of a brotherHugh Stanley PAILTHORPE
March 22, 1886 (aged 3 years)
Birth of a brotherArthur Leonard PAILTHORPE
December 1887 (aged 5 years)
Death of a paternal grandfatherSamuel PAILTHORPE
December 1888 (aged 6 years)
Birth of a brotherSydney Norman PAILTHORPE
September 1889 (aged 7 years)
Birth of a brotherAlan Herbert PAILTHORPE
December 28, 1890 (aged 8 years)
Birth of a brotherFrederick Gerald PAILTHORPE
January 3, 1892 (aged 9 years)
Birth of a brotherLaurence Stewart PAILTHORPE
September 1893 (aged 11 years)
British Queen
Victoria
from June 20, 1837 to January 22, 1901 (aged 18 years)

Death of a brotherSydney Norman PAILTHORPE
June 1902 (aged 19 years)
Death of a fatherEdward Wright PAILTHORPE
June 28, 1904 (aged 21 years)
British King
Edward VII
from January 22, 1901 to May 6, 1910 (aged 27 years)

Death of a brotherAlexander Frank PAILTHORPE
August 27, 1915 (aged 33 years)

Death of a brotherLaurence Stewart PAILTHORPE
June 3, 1918 (aged 35 years)
Death of a motherAnnie Lavinia GREEN
October 10, 1918 (aged 36 years)
Death of a brotherArthur Leonard PAILTHORPE
May 26, 1922 (aged 39 years)
Death of a brotherEdward Wright PAILTHORPE
May 6, 1930 (aged 47 years)
British King
George V
from May 6, 1910 to January 20, 1936 (aged 53 years)

British King
Edward VII
from January 20, 1936 to December 11, 1936 (aged 54 years)

British King
George VI
from December 11, 1936 to February 6, 1952 (aged 69 years)

British Queen
Elizabeth II
from February 6, 1952 (aged 69 years)

Death of a brotherValdemar Douglas PAILTHORPE
September 6, 1952 (aged 70 years)
Death of a brotherFrederick Gerald PAILTHORPE
August 12, 1958 (aged 76 years)
Death of a brotherHugh Stanley PAILTHORPE
August 18, 1966 (aged 84 years)
Burial of a fatherEdward Wright PAILTHORPE

Cemetery: South Ealing Cemetery
Death July 19, 1971 (aged 88 years)
Family with parents
father
18541904
Birth: February 20, 1854 32 31Fore Street, Upper Edmonton
Death: June 28, 190436 Harley House, Regents Park
mother
Marriage MarriageSeptember 1878Islington
2 years
elder brother
18801930
Birth: 1880 25 26Notting Hill
Death: May 6, 1930Marks Longdown, Exeter
3 years
younger brother
18821952
Birth: September 1882 28 28Willesden
Death: September 6, 1952Salvation Army Home, Balmain, NSW
herself
18821971
Birth: July 29, 1882 28 28Sutton, Surrey
Death: July 19, 1971Hastings
2 years
younger brother
18841915
Birth: September 1884 30 30Sutton, Surrey
Death: August 27, 1915
19 months
younger brother
18861966
Birth: March 22, 1886 32 32Sutton, Surrey
Death: August 18, 196618 Highcroft Rd, Erdington, Birmingham
22 months
younger brother
18871922
Birth: December 1887 33 34Redhill, Surrey
Death: May 26, 192214 Marine Mansions, Bexhill, Sussex
22 months
younger brother
18891902
Birth: September 1889 35 35Redhill, Surrey
Death: June 1902Reigate
16 months
younger brother
18901977
Birth: December 28, 1890 36 37Redhill, Surrey
Death: June 1977Aberconwy
1 year
younger brother
18921958
Birth: January 3, 1892 37 38Redhill, Surrey
Death: August 12, 1958West Bromwich & General District Hospital
21 months
younger brother
18931918
Birth: September 1893 39 39Redhill, Surrey
Death: June 3, 1918France
Shared note

Grace Pailthorpe was an extraordinary woman. She was a surgeonduring the First World War, but rejected surgery in favour ofpsycho-medicine. She dealt with victims of the war throughpsychoanalysis, seeking to uncover its therapeutic value. Pailthorpe pioneered certain advances in the treatment ofprisoners, such as sentences without prison terms for juvenileoffenders in the 1920s. She came to believe that humanliberation was bound up with the development of complete freedomof expression. To examine this conception through artisticcreation, she developed an intense professional and personalrelationship with Mednikoff.They decided to embark on a project that would see them becomesignificant figures in the early period of Surrealism inBritain, giving lectures on their ideas and work to some of themost prominent modern artists. Pailthorpe explained that fromthe very beginning their work ran "parallel" to that of theSurrealists. They had the same aims, she maintained, butachieved them by a different route.