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Andy
Parsons
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Jennifer Harding Church of the Transfiguration, Kissonerga, Cyprus (tempera, 1'6" x 1'10") Jennifer Harding Jennifer Harding was born in the New Forest, close to the country house of Thomas Archer, architect of St Paul's Church. She studied Fine Art at Canterbury College of Art and Cyprus College of Art, subsequently being awarded a scholarship to study at the School of Fine Arts in Athens, culminating in a solo exhibition at the British Council Gallery, Athens. After returning to Cyprus College of Art as Visiting Artist, at which she continues to lecture annually, she worked as an archaeological illustrator in Turkey. The Cypriot landscape and culture both ancient and modern has had a profound influence on her painting. Exhibitions include Royal Academy, British Council Gallery Cyprus, Fine Art Society, John Moores Exhibition Liverpool and the Whitechapel and Camden Open Exhibitions, with a solo show at the Hellenic Centre London. Since 1980 she has participated in numerous studio events in Wapping, Greenwich and Deptford. |
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Bola Bamgboye Bola Bamgboye is an artist based in England, of Nigerian parentage. He returned with his parents to Nigeria where he was educated, graduating with a B.A. in Fine Arts and working as a teacher in the subject for a year.
He returned to the UK and Art, holding workshops in Storytelling and Drama, Textile Design (tie & dye/batik), Claywork, African Mask Making and African Music. He is currently exhibiting in Nottingham: “Using a self-penned style I seek to represent vibrations in space, influenced by the shape of an African calabash. I believe that space is made up of a dynamic activity that can be captured in line. Hence, my exhibition – Calabash Melody – seeks to freeze-frame the beautiful vibrations that surround this botanical form … in divine lines.”
e-mail: a.Omjol3@hotmail.com |
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Gerda Rubenstein Gerda Rubenstein grew up in Holland and has lived in Blackheath since 1960, with a studio in Greenwich. She has shown locally, in the Royal Academy and in Amsterdam. She has works in private and public collections, including Lewisham Town Hall, Tesco, St Saviours & St Olaves School, Watford, Harlow and Amsterdam. "Claire" or "Schoolgirl" was modelled from life in 1990 as a demonstration to show students how to start modelling in clay. It was finished in the studio. It has been shown in London and Amsterdam and this is no. 5 of an edition of six. |
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Debbie Lee Debbie Lee has studied at Loughborough College of Art, Glasgow School of Art, Art Institute of Chicago, Royal College of Art, Cyprus School of Art and Goldsmiths College of Art. She has had solo shows throughout the UK, as well as group exhibitions in Scotland, Chicago, London, Cyprus, Germany. Awards and prizes include Vethieul Studios, France; Landscape Prize & a scholarship to Florence, Royal Scottish Academy; Merit scholarship, Art Institute of Chicago; Barcelona Studios, Royal College of Art, Commonwealth Universities Research Scholarship to India. Her work is in collections at the British Library and the Royal Scottish Academy. "Stations of the Cross" was commissioned for St Mary of Rotherhithe in 2002 as a limited edition. It was exhibited at the Cumbria Institute of the Arts, the Canopy in Kendal and the Peacock Art Gallery, Aberdeen. Individual prints are available from the artist on request. |
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Shirley van Velden Shirley van Velden came to painting after becoming a chef and then an antique textile dealer. Her teacher at Morley College, Evelyn Ballantine, encouraged her to play with colour and unimagined possibilities emerged. She has exhibited in London galleries and at the Chelsea Festival, and had a solo show this year at the Tremayne Gallery, Cornwall.
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Shirley van Velden
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Tina Mammoser Tina's paintings are abstractions, but firstly they are landscapes. The works always involve the presence of water since she has always lived near water - Lake Michigan, the Tay, the Thames and the Quaggy River. The paintings start with a representation of one structure or landmark and become an expression of colour and space, leaving a trace of identifiable landscape. The structure in the image, such as Millennium Bridge or a horizon seen through the circle of the London Eye, remains as a point of reference for the viewer. She wants people to see either the place painted from or one from their own memories, as the abstraction allows them to create their own landscape from the pieces of texture and colour on the canvas. Tina Mammoser has exhibited in the National Society of Painters, Sculptors and Printmakers (associate member), Skylark Co-operative (OXO Tower), Royal Society of Marine Artists and Pastel Society, as well as regular group and solo shows in the London area. Web site: www.tina-m.com |
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George Rowlett George Rowlett studied at Camberwell School of Art and the Royal Academy Schools. He has had numerous solo shows in the UK, South Africa, Germany and Chicago. Works in collections include the Grimsby Museum, Northern Arts, Cleveland Museum, Nuffield Foundation, Baring Brothers, Prudential Corporation plc, St Andrews University, Hiscox Group, Berado Foundation Madeira & Lisbon, Medway Council, British Council. George Rowlett works mainly outdoors and his paintings have always been about trying to find a point of fusion between the much loved qualities of oil paint and his own intense feelings before nature, in an attempt to produce an image made from what he thinks of as "living paint". The truer to paint, the truer to nature. He shares his time between Rotherhithe in London and Deal in Kent, where he paints full-time. |
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Maire Quinn Award winning artist, Maire Quinn, has exhibited at the National Portrait Gallery, Royal Watercolour Society, Royal Ulster Academy, the Whitechapel and other prestigious galleries. Her study of the demolition of Hither Green Hospital won the Royal Watercolour Society Elizabeth Scott-Moore Prize in 2001.
Equally adept at landscape, portraiture, still life and nudes, she works
mainly in oils, watercolours and print. |
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Michael Stokoe Michael Stokoe trained at St Martin’s School of Art and is a Senior Lecturer at Ravensbourne College of Art. He has had numerous solo shows throughout the UK and in France, with group exhibitions including Royal Academy, Arts Council of Northern Ireland, John Moores Exhibition Liverpool, New Gallery Belfast, Annely Juda, Museum of Modern Art Oxford, Geffrye Museum, London Group, Printmakers Council and Barbican Gallery. His works are held extensively in public collections, including Victoria & Albert Museum, Aberdeen Art Gallery, Biblioteque Nationale Paris, Glasgow Museum &Art Gallery, Manchester City Art Gallery, National Museum of Wales, Walker Art Gallery Liverpool and in numerous provincial art galleries and education authorities. |
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Howard Morgan Howard Morgan’s numerous Royal and private commissions include HM The Queen, HM The Queen of the Netherlands, HRH Prince Michael of Kent, TRH The Prince and Princess of Hanover, Dame Antoinette Sibley NPG, Marques de Caltojar Tulio and Lady Bell. There are permanent displays of his work in the National Portrait Gallery including Paul Maurice Dirac, Herbert Howells, Francis Crick and Tom Stoppard. Exhibitions include Anthony Mould, Claridges, Richmond Gallery, Cadogan Contemporary Watercolours, Thomas Agnew, Park Walk Gallery, Leighton House Exhibition, Sara Steward Watercolours and Opera Pictures. e-mail address howard@j-morgan.demon.co.uk. |
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| Lynette
Hemmant Lynette Hemmant studied at St Martin's School of Art and has combined freelance book illustration with other commissions. She featured in Best Children's Books of the Year listings and her work was used for TV story-telling and schools programmes in the UK and elsewhere. She is an Associate of the Society of Graphic Fine Art.
Lynette Hemmant has been interviewed and her work photographed for Country
Homes and Interiors, with articles in The English Garden, 25 Beautiful
Gardens and The Garden Shed in the USA.
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Lynette Hemment
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Pamela
Mara |
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Ronald Morgan, RBA, ROI Ronald Morgan was born in Staffordshire in 1936 and studied Art at Walsall School of Art. He is a painter in water-colour, black and white, oil and pastel, a draughtsman, illustrator, linguist, teacher and member of the Chelsea Art Society, the Royal Society of British Artists and the Royal Institute of Oil Painters. He has exhibited at the Royal Academy, the Royal Society
of British Artists, the Royal Institute of Oil Painters, the Royal Institute
of Painters of Watercolour, New English Art Club, the Royal Society of
Marine Artists, the Paris Salon, Guildhall Art Gallery, National Museum
of Wales, Royal Birmingham Society of Artists, Society of Graphic Art,
Britain in Watercolour, Whitechapel Art Gallery, Royal Festival Hall,
Hertford Art Society and many provincial galleries. In 1974 Ronald Morgan won first prize in the Lord Mayor of London's Art Award Exhibition and is entered in Who's Who in Art, Dictionary of International Biography and Royal Academy Exhibitors. His work has been reproduced in La Revue Moderne and Leisure Painter, for which he has also written articles on Painting. |
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Robert Geary FCSD Hon SGFA Robert Geary was born in 1931 in Battersea where he attended elementary schools until gaining a free place at the Hammersmith School of Arts & Crafts in 1945 Since retiring from a career in general illustration, Geary has returned to his original interest in graphic humour. Having illustrated some short stories for Punch (1978-81), he has more recently produced drawings for a number of children's books. His work has also appeared in newspapers and magazines such as the Sunday Telegraph, the Independent, the Times Higher Education Supplement, New Statesman, Private Eye and the Oldie |
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Arthur Wilson Arthur Wilson studied at the Chelsea School of Art is now a full-time artist. He lectured at the Epsom School of Art and was elected a member of the London Group in 1967. Exhibitions include the Arnolfini, Art Spectrum, Royal Academy Diploma Gallery, Economist Gallery, Camden Arts Centre, Barbican, South London Gallery, Danielle Arnaud Gallery, Henry Moore Gallery, ICA, Whitechapel, Blue Coats, Sunderland Art Gallery, Walk Gallery, Kettles Yard, Whitworth, Mall Galleries. His work is found in private and public collections, including the Bristol City Art Gallery and the Hounslow Picture Scheme, and has been reviewed in The Guardian, Arts Review, The Observer, Art International, Directory of Marine Artists and Mathematics & Modern Art.
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Peter Kalkhof Peter Kalkhof: painter, lecturer in Fine Art. Studied: School of Arts & Crafts, Braunschweig; Academy of Fine Art, Stuttgart; Slade School of Fine Art; Ecole des Beaux Arts, Paris. Exib: Annely Juda Fine Art, Scottish Arts Council, Juda-Rowan Gallery, Landesmuseum Oldenburg, Camden Arts Centre, Galerie Roesch Neubrunn Karlsruhe, St Hugh's College Oxford. Work in collections: Northern Ireland Trust, Arts Council of Gt. Britain, Leicester Educ. Authority, European Parliament, Landesmuseum Oldenburg, Ostpreussen Museum. Commissions: 1987 Treaty-Centre: Mural (Taylor Woodrow). |
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Bernard Myers Bernard Myers studied at Camberwell Art School and the Royal College of Art. He pursued a dual career as a teaching and practising artist and designer. Whilst continuing to paint and draw he has worked as a part-time teacher at various London art schools, Art Master at the Architectural Association School, Senior Tutor at the Royal College of Art, Professor of Design Technology at Brunel University and Visiting Professor a the Indian Institute of Technology, Delhi. Myers work may be found in public and private collections in the UK, Hong Kong, Japan and India. Exhibitions include New Art Centre, New Grafton Gallery |
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Janet Patterson Janet Patterson has exhibited in solo exhibitions in the UK and in group exhibitions including Angela Flowers Gallery, the Royal College of Art, the Walk Gallery, Piers Feetham Gallery, Morley College and East London Printmakers, with commissions for Dresdner Kleinwort Benson. Her works have been extensively collected throughout Great Britain, Germany and the USA publicly, privately and corporately.Education: Slade School of Fine Art, Dip. Fine Art London University, City University, MA Arts Criticism. Lecturer at: Edinburgh College of Art, Loughborough College of Art, Central St. Martins, Slade School of Fine Art, Wimbledon College of Art. Travel Scholarships: French Government Scholarship, Winston Churchill Travel Fellowship, Norwegian Government Scholarship, Turkish Government Scholarship, British Council Travel Scholarship. Awards: Hunting Art Award, Royal Watercolour Society Award, Scottish Arts Council Bursary, Drawing Prize Slade School.Janet Patterson appears in BritArt Directory, Dictionary of 20th Century Artists, Dictionary of Scottish Artists, Who's Who in Art, Dictionary of Painters & Sculptors, Royal Academy Illustrated Catalogue, as well as a variety of art publications and catalogues. In 1988 she published Dreamtime - a Traveller's Images of Australia. |
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Jonathan Purday Two small canvases painted by the artist responsible for the the front cover of the 'Gomez' album. He is in collections in London by celebrities and he exhibits widely. |
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| Nuwa Wamala-Nnyanzi Ugandan
artist, Nnyanzi, started painting in 1978 while in exile in Kenya. He
has held many exhibitions in Africa, Europe, North America, Japan and
Australia
Nnyanzi's
work features in the UNICEF greeting card collection, on a medallion by
the UN Commission for Human Settlement and on the cover of World Health
Report. He has also undertaken a mural for the University of Transkei,
sculpture for Coca Cola International and portrait and collage work for
the Ugandan Catholic Church |
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Stephen Codner Stephen Codner studied at Camberwell School of Art, City & Guilds Art School and Heatherleys Since then he has shown in many mixed exhibitions which have included the Royal West of England Academy, Royal Society of Portrait Painters, Royal Academy Summer Exhibition, 'Spirit of London' at the Royal Festival Hall, Royal Overseas League, 'Example Art' in Fulham, 'Discerning Eye' at the Mall Galleries and the Llewellyn Alexander Gallery. Stephen Codner has also had one-man shows at various London galleries, the most recent being the Open Space Gallery. He has pursued a career in part-time teaching and his work hangs in many private collections in the UK and around the world. |
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Pam Izzard Pam Izzard studied at Beckenham & Bromley Schools of Art and has exhibited extensively, including Royal Academy, Royal Society of British Artists, New English Arts Club, The London Group, Pavillion Gallery Brighton and numerous galleries in London and the provinces, where she has had solo shows. Pam Izzard has taught at Kingston-upon-Thames Polytechnic, Walthamstow School of Art, North East London Polytechnic and has been a Visiting Lecturer at Wimbledon School of Art, Farnham School of Art, Canterbury School of Art, Harrogate School of Art and City & Guilds School of Art Works have been purchased by various public authorities in London and the provinces and by private collectors in the UK, USA, Denmark and elsewhere |
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Minnie Fry Having first built a substantial reputation based on her work in oils, Johannesburg-born artist, Minnie Fry, then began using watercolours and went on to study printmaking at Morley College. She came to prominence in 1958 with her exhibition at London's New Vision Centre and her work has
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Keir
Smith Following his early academic interest in the painting, sculpture and architecture of the Italian Renaissance, he began to extract more and more imagery and iconography from these works to enrich his studio practice. His occasional visits to Italy became more frequent and his ongoing research became a primary resource for his own art. |
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