Lieutenant-Commander George Fagan Bradshaw R.N., D.S.O., S.M.A., (1887-1960) - Submariner and Marine Artist: And the St.Ives Society of Artists by TOVEY David

Lieutenant-Commander George Fagan Bradshaw R.N., D.S.O., S.M.A., (1887-1960) - Submariner and Marine Artist: And the St.Ives Society of Artists

TOVEY David
280 pages
Wilson Books
Jan 2000
Paperback
Arts & Photography WSBN
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Wilson Books [Published Date: 200]. Soft cover, 248 pp., plus 16 unnumbered pages of colored plates, with black and white illustrations throughout. [From back cover] This book is both a biography of the marine artist, George Fagan Bradshaw (1887-1960) , and a history of the first thirty years of the St Ives Society of Artists from its foundation in 1927, for Bradshaw was the principal instigator of the Society's formation, a leading figure in the Society's development in the 1930s and the spokesman for the traditional artists at the time of the tumultuous split with the modernists in 1949. This event brought to an abrupt end the Society's heyday, a period during which the yearly Royal Academy shows regularly boasted more than seventy works by members of the Society and touring exhibitions by the Society attracted ever-increasing numbers of visitors at many Municipal Galleries around the Country. George Bradshaw was born in Belfast in 1887. His family had a distinguished lineage but, after an unhappy childhood, he was sent off at the age of 15 to Dartmouth for Naval training. He elected to join the fledgling Submarine Service and served as a submarine commander with distinction during the First World War, winning a D. S.O. After his discharge from the Navy in 1921, he settled in St Ives in order to pursue his great interest in marine painting. There he met his vivacious wife, Kathleen, at the Simpson School of Art, where he was appointed Assistant, and he became a stalwart of the art colony until his death in 1960. Bradshaw was soon recognised as a talented marine artist with good technique and keen powers of observation. His works, which display great variety and originality, were often accepted for the Royal Academy, but the St Ives Society was the focus of his art...
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About this book
Pages 280
Publisher Wilson Books
Published 2000
Readers 0