Mary Esperance ("Nancy") Wynne-Jones was born in December 1922 in Penmaenucha in
Wales to landowner Charles Llewellyn Wynne-Jones and Sybil Mary Gella Scott. The family spent half the year in Wales and half the year in Thornhill, Stalbridge,
Dorset. She had two brothers, Andrew and Ronald ("Polly") both of whom died in Africa during
World War II. Wynne-Jones was educated at home. Her skill in art led to her getting lessons in
Sherborne from a children's book illustrator. Her music was encouraged by the family doctor and she began to compose and study the violin, receiving lessons in
Bournemouth with the first violinist of the symphony orchestra. After the start of the Second World War, she continued in
Aberystwyth. Wynne-Jones went on to study the violin and composition at the
Royal Academy of Music,
London (1940–43). While in London she also served as a
Voluntary Aid Detachment nurse until 1943 and later as a draughtswoman at the
Ordnance Survey. After the War Wynne-Jones purchased and managed a bookshop on the King's Road in Chelsea, but it was not a financial success. She returned to painting, studying at the
Heatherley School of Fine Art, London from 1951 to 1952 and the
Chelsea School of Art from 1952–1955. She travelled extensively through
Portugal and
Italy painting landscapes. An interest in completing landscapes in an abstract manner led her to study with
Peter Lanyon in
St Ives, Cornwall. ==Personal life==