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Rowland Suddaby 1912-1972
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untitled (Open Landscape)
oil on canvas
51 x 60 cm |
Rowland Suddaby was a painter, mainly of landscapes. Born in Kimberworth,
Yorkshire
Suddaby studied at Sheffield College of Art from 1926, winning a
scholarship there.
In 1931 he married and moved to London with few prospects, but spent two
years designing for films in Wardour Street before starting to paint full-time.
In 1935 had a first one-man show at the Wertheim Gallery, the next year he
exhibited with the Redfern Gallery and with it had a series of one-man
appearances. After World War II exhibited solo with Leger Galleries, more recent
exhibitions including Austin/Desmond Fine Art.
Eventually Suddaby settled at Great Cornard, Sudbury, Suffolk, and became
associated with scenes of East Anglia. He illustrated the covers of books by the
Essex Marshland writer S L Bensusan and was a founder of the Colchester Art
Society, with Edward Bawden, John Nash and Cedric Morris among the exhibitors.
Suddaby also did poster work for Shell, designed textiles and prints and
participated in the Pilgrim Trust Recording Britain project. During his
final years he was curator of Gainsborough’s House, in Sudbury.
Suddaby’s work is in many public collections in Britain and abroad, including
the Victoria & Albert Museum. His pictures have a spontaneous vitality, a richness of
colour, an immediacy which is unmistakeable.
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