Dennis
Ivall
Dennis’s son David sent me a copy of the tribute
below.
Tribute
to Dennis Endean Ivall, who passed away on 6th February 2006, aged 84 years,
read at his funeral at St. Piran’s Church, Perranarworthal
Dennis Endean Ivall was born in Essex in 1921, the
youngest of four children. His father
was then an accountant with ICI and his mother was a member of the Endean
family of St. Agnes, so he visited Cornwall for holidays from an early
age. He attended the Sir George Monoux
Grammar School in Chingford, and then joined ICI. In the Second World War he enlisted in the
Ordnance Corps, seeing active service in the retreat from Burma, and later in
Ceylon and the Cocos Islands, where he reached the rank of Warrant Officer,
First Class.
After the war he trained as an artist and art
teacher, and it was at this period that he became engaged to Irene Lloyd-Jones,
the sister of his best friend from school.
Although she went out to Australia for a year, he was waiting on her
return, and they married in 1952.
Working at first as a freelance artist, he later became an art teacher
in Barnstaple, North Devon – the nearest to Cornwall that he could get at the
time. It was while living at Barnstaple
that their two sons were born – David and Gerard.
In 1973, Dennis took early retirement and moved to
Cornwall, living at first at Ponsanooth and then for thirty years at
Perranwell. He worked as a designer, a
record agent and principally as a heraldic artist and designer, only retiring
from this work when suffering from illness in the last three years of his life.
Heraldic art was his great passion, and he carried
out the design and painting of coats of arms for many clients across the
world. He was the author of the book
Cornish Heraldry and Symbolism and, among the work he carried out in Cornwall,
was the painting of the organ panels at Cuby church, the repainting of the coat
of arms at St.Dennis after the fire and the design and painting of a banner for
St.Agnes and, of course, the banner of St. Piran in this church.
Heraldry and his military service gave rise to an
interest in army insignia and badges and, with Professor Charles Thomas, he was
the author and illustrator of Military Insignia of Cornwall. He was a founder member of the Cornwall
Militaria Group, and a long serving member of the Perranarworthal branch of the
British Legion.
His enthusiasm for heraldry led Dennis to join the
Order of St.Lazarus, an international charitable order founded in the Holy
Land. He was a member of the Commandery
of Avalon in the West Country, and became Judge of Arms of the Commandery, of
the Bailiwick of England and then of the whole order worldwide, attaining the
rank of Knight Grand Cross.
His other great interest was family history, and in
his researches over the years he succeeded in tracing his Ivall ancestors back
to the seventeenth century in Hampshire, and his Endean ancestors in Cornwall
back to the fifteenth century. He was a
founder member of the Cornwall Family History Society, a committee member for a
number of years and, among his projects for the Society, he and Irene recorded
and plotted all the memorial inscriptions in Perranarworthal churchyard. He also studied the Cornish language, becoming
a bard of the Cornish Gorseth, and served on the Gorseth Council.
Although he was such a talented artist, with a
worldwide clientele, he was always ready to lend his talents to local
activities, whether painting scenery for Carnon Downs Drama Group, drawing
posters for the Women’s Institute or touching up the lettering on the war
memorial.
Dennis is survived by Irene, his wife for over fifty
years, his two sons and his elder sister in America. He will be remembered by them as a loving,
gentle man, always supportive, never criticising. He will be remembered by everyone else as
someone always cheerful, always with a friendly word or a joke (even if not a
very good one), always ready to help. We
shall miss him.
4 comments:
Those with a fascination for heraldic art are few. Those with the ability to create it, fewer. I was told more than once by heraldic artists that Dennis was among the most talented of our time. The wonderful work he did for me seems to bear that out. He made his mark and his legacy endures.
I have two of his pieces on my wall passed down from my grandfather.
Cornish hero
I made a mistake: the organ is still in Tregony, Saint Cuby! I was sorting my pictures and mixed them up. But: it is still beautiful and the paintings are wonderful!
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