:: A Brief Biography click any image with a coloured border to enlarge.

Following is a short biography, reproduced with the kind permission of Pamela Blevins that details Joy's involvement with the affairs of the poet and musician Ivor Gurney. This article originally appeared on the MusicWeb Web site amongst others.

JOY FINZI 1907-1991
Joy Finzi was a 20th century renaissance woman who possessed extraordinary vision and a remarkable gift for anticipating new trends before they began. She was an artist, sculptor, poet, musician, and organizer who, as we say today, "made things happen". And she was to be one of the most important people in Ivor Gurney’s life even though they never met.

For more than 30 years, Joy worked tirelessly, first with her husband Gerald Finzi and later alone in trying circumstances, to ensure that Ivor Gurney’s work, correspondence and the story of his life be preserved for future generations. Starting in the 1930s, Joy, Gerald and their friend Howard Ferguson undertook the massive task of sorting and cataloging Gurney’s poetry and music which was in the possession of his friend and guardian Marion Scott.

Later, after Gerald’s death, it was Joy Finzi who had to deal with the difficulties imposed by Gurney’s brother Ronald, who, at times, threatened to destroy all of Ivor’s papers and refused to allow publication of his work. At other times, Ronald threatened to take legal action against Joy, warning her that "as my brother’s administrator, I don’t intend to let anyone usurp my position". Joy Finzi refused to let Ronald Gurney intimidate her. Eventually he relented and placed Ivor’s papers in the Gloucester Library where they remain today on permanent loan.

Joy Finzi was born Joyce Black in Hampstead on March 3, 1907 to Ernest Black, a prosperous businessman, who was an ‘East India Merchant’, and Amy Whitehorn. Little is known of her father’s family background but her mother was of Scottish descent. The Blacks’ eldest son, Harold was born in India in 1890 but died when he was 18 months old. A second son Geoffrey was born in 1892 in England and died from blood poisoning at the age of 21. Joy’s younger sister Margaret or ‘Mags’ was born in 1909.

Joy was educated at Moira House in Eastbourne, where the family had settled after her father’s retirement. Tall, fair, graceful and radiant, the young Joyce Black possessed the kind of beauty admired by the Pre-Raphaelite painters and abilities that ranged from music to tennis. She seemed to excel at whatever she attempted. Early on, Joy’s contemporaries recognized her extraordinary abilities and one friend later described how she stood in awe of Joy and "looked up to her as one with brilliant gifts in everything". She studied violin and, after her marriage, sculpture and pottery at the Central School of Art and Design.

Gerald Finzi met Joyce Black when he rented a cottage from her in the early 1930s and had to call on her for help because a problem with the flue caused the cottage to fill with smoke. Joy found the young composer "singularly inarticulate... plain to the point of ugliness. Inhibited and aware of it ... I had never met anyone so sensitive and capable of hurt but with such boundless vitality". But Finzi, "like all who have known the shadows...had an immense capacity for enjoyment. A great appreciation of many things — and infinite delight & humour," Joy was to recall many years later. [1]

Gerald and Joy were married on September 16, 1933 at the Dorking Registry Office with Ralph and Adeline Vaughan Williams and Mags Black as the only witnesses. They lived in London but soon moved to Aldbourne, an attractive village in Wiltshire, where they bought Beech Knoll, a substantial early 19th century house with large grounds. Their first son, Christopher, was born in 1934; their second son, Nigel, in 1936. In 1939, the Finzis moved to Ashmansworth and their new home, Church Farm, designed by architect Peter Harland, who had also created a house for composer Arthur Bliss. Their view looked out across rolling fields and hills, the Hampshire Downs and, on a clear day, the Isle of Wight, shimmering in the distance.

Below: A photograph dated Christmas 1937,
believed to be Joy's first portrait.

Joy’s first pencil portrait was of the three-year old Christopher asleep. [2]

Gerald immediately recognized an unusually strong gift and encouraged her to draw more. She spent time drawing friends and country people in conversation with Gerald, an exercise which led her to discover the "fascination of trying to catch a fleeting aspect and learning that everything is laid down in the face and often hidden in mobility". Her pencil portraits, which express force, character and craftsmanship like those of Da Vinci and other Renaissance artists, captured what was indeed hidden in the faces of a wide range of subjects including composers Gerald Finzi, Ralph Vaughan Williams, Howard Ferguson, writers Ursula Le Guin, Sylvia Townsend Warner, war poets Edmund Blunden and David Jones, conductor Sir Adrian Boult and people who led quiet, ordinary lives like "Smithy — Mrs. Smith — Country child — London char" and "Pu", Howard Ferguson’s Irish Nanny from County Monaghan. In 1987, the Libanus Press published a collection of Joy Finzi’s portraits in a book entitled In That Place. Her portrait of Vaughan Williams is in the collection of the National Portrait Gallery in London.

During World War II, the Finzis opened their home to German and Czech refugees and anyone who needed shelter. Gisa Cartright recalled that "Mrs. Finzi rescued me from London where I was very unhappy in my job as a domestic, and gave me work as a cook. I had come from Germany straight after leaving school before the war in 1938 and was a refugee. I had nobody to turn to. There suddenly was dear Mrs. Finzi to help me. Coming to Church Farm and working for her was like stepping from hell into paradise."

Joy also became the administrative force behind the organization of the Newbury String Players, which had been founded by Gerald in 1940. Joy’s job was to find the players. She also served as one of the second violinists. Later both Christopher and Nigel joined their father’s amateur orchestra. Together Gerald and Joy encouraged young musicians like Julian Bream and composers like Kenneth Leighton by providing them with engagements and performances of their compositions.

In addition to preserving Gurney’s work, the Finzis also played important roles in the preservation and cataloguing of the music of Sir Hubert Parry.

After Finzi’s death in 1956, Joy along with her sons and Howard Ferguson founded the Finzi Trust and under its auspices most of Gerald’s music was recorded, first with Lyrita and later by Hyperion, Chandos and EMI. The work of the Finzi Trust has never been limited to Finzi’s music alone and has supported recordings and performances of music by other composers, including Gurney. Joy also encouraged artists in all fields and took a particular interest in the paintings of Benedict Rubbra, the son of composer Edmund Rubbra.

Joy eventually moved to her cottage Bushy Leaze in Leckhampstead, where she built a studio that looked out over a view that had not changed in centuries — fields, an ancient cottage, the distant hills, nothing that marked the landscape as being of the 20th century. Her home was surrounded by gardens and attracted a variety of wildlife, particularly birds that Joy fed every morning. Her home was always open to friends and became a sanctuary for those who needed a break from the pressures of work or neighbors who dropped by for a visit.

"One almost felt that she had some intuitive rapport with natural life, some atavistic resonance with the past which were embodied in the character of cottage and garden... Frequently she reminded me of the timeless, eponymous sage of Edward Thomas’s poem ‘Lob’,’ recalled Andrew Burn, a founder of the Finzi Trust Friends.

In addition to her drawing, Joy wrote poetry and published two collections:
A Point of Departure (1967), with engravings by Richard Shirley Smith and
Twelve Months of the Year (1981), with engravings by Simon Brett.

In March 1991, Joy suffered a broken hip in a fall at her home and endured two operations since the first one to fix her hip was done incorrectly. She did not want her life prolonged unnaturally and returned to the home she had shared with Gerald to be cared for by her son, Christopher and his family. She was ready to die and refused all food and medication.

"It was a great relief for all of us for her to return to Ashmansworth, and get out of a hospital dedicated to making you live," recalled her son Nigel. When Nigel returned to England from abroad, he found his mother "still just able to talk, as she lay in peace looking out over the green hills, with the spring flowers and blossoms in full array. This green world, or light, was a wonderful delight to her, and all she wanted to do between sleeping was see it and sense it," said Nigel.

"The everyday world, as we see it, was not with her, and her daily observations of her magical view from her bed were whispered, ‘how beautiful’, ‘that green’, or ‘how lucky I am’. She was untroubled and waiting to leave," Nigel continued in a tribute to his mother. "Joy seemed to defy the normal patterns of departing from this world as she slowly and peacefully ebbed away from it."

Joy Finzi died on June 14, 1991 at the age of 84.

© PAMELA BLEVINS, 2000

Right: The cover of The Farewell Tribute

*Notes
1. Other people found Gerald "strikingly handsome" with his black hair and steel-blue eyes.

2. The age of Kiffer originally given was six but this does contradict the dating of the photograph. However, the correspondence between Pamela and Joy was some 50 years later so some time slippage obviously occurred.

 
   
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