Norman Parkinson 1913–1990 | Tate https://www.tate.org.uk/art/artists/norman-parkinson-10581
Artist page for Norman Parkinson (1913–1990)
Princess Anne’s 19th birthday and the Investiture portrait of Charles III as Prince of Wales
Artist page for Norman Parkinson (1913–1990)
Princess Anne’s 19th birthday and the Investiture portrait of Charles III as Prince of Wales
Josef Herman (1911–2000) was a Polish artist who spent most of his adult life in Britain. Born in Warsaw to a Yiddish-speaking Jewish family, he initially trained as a typesetter and graphic artist, briefly attending the Warsaw School of Art from 1930 and holding his first exhibition in 1932. During the mid-1930s he co-founded a group of young politically radical artists calling themselves ‘The Phrygian Bonnet’. In 1938, in the face of rising antisemitism, he left Poland for Brussels, attracted there by his interest in Flemish art. Following the German invasion of Belgium, he fled to France and then to …
activities, including his writings, the script of a BBC documentary about his time in Wales
John Brett’s The British Channel Seen from the Dorsetshire Cliffs 1871 can be appreciated properly, with dirt and discoloured varnish removed.
Technical Note on Brett’s Paintings’ in John Brett: A Pre-Raphaelite on the Shores of Wales
Artist page for Thomas Girtin (1775–1802)
Joseph Mallord William Turner c.1800–1802 View by appointment Conwy, North Wales
Artist page for Richard Billingham (born 1970)
Billingham lives in Swansea on the Gower Peninsula in South Wales and holds professorships
Artist page for John Nash (1893–1977)
Dorset Landscape John Nash c.1915 Rocks and Sand Dunes, Oxwich Bay, South Wales
Artist page for Antony Donaldson (born 1939)
Liverpool, Olinda Museums in Pernambuco, Brazil, and the Art Gallery of New South Wales
Artist page for Euan Uglow (1932–2000)
include the Tate Gallery, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and the National Museum of Wales
in some of Holbein’s portraits from the late 1530s, for exampleEdward, Prince of Wales
Artist page for Sir Cedric Morris, Bt (1889–1982)
He was born in Swansea in South Wales, but worked mainly in East Anglia.