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Current
Rowland Suddaby
works in stock
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Rowland Suddaby:
Born in Kimberworth, Yorkshire, Rowland
Suddaby studied at the Sheffield College of Art from
1926, winning a scholarship there. He came to London in
1931 aged nineteen, married young, and found it a real
struggle to make a living in those early years. However
his work was noticed by Rex Nan Kivell and he had a
successful show initially at the Wertheim Gallery in
London in 1935, who were always ready to give new
talented artists a showcase for their work, and then a
series of shows from 1936 at the Redfern Gallery. He was
regarded by the latter as an artist 'successor' to
Christopher Wood, and he painted vigorous and
atmospheric pictures in London and Cornwall in the mid
to late 1930s some very much in the Wood tradition.
These paintings in both oils and watercolours had
spontaneity and a sureness of touch which really caught
the imagination of critics and collectors alike.
After the outbreak of war Suddaby moved
to the Suffolk countryside, settling near Sudbury. He
found the landscape and coastline of East Anglia an
inspiration for the trademark pictures for which he is
now most widely known. Once seen his paintings of
Suffolk fields, ponds, trees and wooden fences, remain
in the memory as they are both so evocative of the
landscape and so distinctly Rowland Suddaby. During the
1940s and 1950s Suddaby continued his still life
painting which also became very popular with visitors to
shows at the Leger Galleries and more locally at the
Colchester Art Society, of which he was a founder
member. Suddaby's work was acquired by many
prominent collectors and public bodies, including the V&
A Museum. There are 24 examples in the Government Art
Collection alone.
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