Designer Desire: Ifor Pritchard

Montage of Ifor Pritchard paintings

Since moving to Ceredigion, we’ve discovered so many incredible Welsh artists. The latest in that line is Ifor Pritchard. I adore his expressive, impasto style; thick strokes of oil paint confidently applied with brush and knife to the canvas.

Pritchard (1940-2010) was a painter whose subject matter consisted mainly of the slate quarrying industry that he saw around him growing up in Carmel, Gwynedd in North Wales. He created portraits of the quarrymen (at work and at the pub), the quarry managers, the work horses, the machinery.

For many years, he worked as an art teacher mainly at Ysgol Sir Huw Owen in Caernarfon from where he retired in 1992. It wasn’t until 2007 that he mounted his first exhibition (of 30 works) in Glynllifon, south of Caernarfon.

Memories are my inspiration. Memories of a childhood in the village of Carmel in the ’40s. This is a village situated within a stone’s throw of the Dyffryn Nantlle slate quarries and was, therefore, a village that was almost totally dependent on the slate. After a lifetime of producing and teaching art, memories now transport me back to those early days. It is an endeavour to depict an extremely claustrophobic life that was, in the main, based on the quarry and the chapel. I am only interested in the human aspect of the industry. I have slate, but not the dust, in my veins.

Craig yr Oesoedd/True Grit by Myrddin ap Dafydd is an 80-page, bi-lingual study of some of his works.

Image credits:
Artnet | Mutual Art

Auction alert: The Fine Sale

'Rolex' style advertising wall clock

Our featured auction this week is Lockdales – The Fine Sale #203. It takes place across two days – the 1st & 2nd September from 9.30am. The auctioneers are based in Martlesham Heath, IP5 3RF (just east of Ipswich). However, as usual, you can bid online and organise with them to have items shipped to you.

All the lots we’ve chosen to feature this week are from day 2. There’s an eclectic assortment on offer; from antique furniture, and fine art paintings, transfer printed ironstone pot lids to mid century modern pottery, silver flatware to luxury fountain pens.

A buyers’ premium of 18%+VAT is added on top of the hammer price. In addition, any bids you put on via The Saleroom.com are subject to a surcharge of 4.95%+VAT and all bids made via Easyliveauction.com are subject to either a surcharge of 3%+VAT or a one-off, fixed pre-payment of £3.00 per auction.

'Rolex' style advertising wall clock

Lot 524: Advertising Wall Clock
Red & blue (Pepsi) ‘Rolex’ style advertising wall clock, black dial reads ‘Rolex Oyster Perpetual Date, GMT Master II’, diameter 34cm approx.
Estimate: £60 – £80

Two Modernist Arts & Crafts style silver Orbit caddy spoons

Lot 733: Two Modernist Arts & Crafts style silver Orbit caddy spoons
Two Modernist Arts & Crafts style silver Orbit caddy spoons both marked MJP 925 with the Birmingham anchor Town mark. MJP stands for Martyn Pugh. Together they weigh 49.3g approx.
Estimate: £50 – £60

Laurence Stephen Lowry R.A. 'An Industrial Town'

Lot 816: Laurence Stephen Lowry R.A. ‘An Industrial Town’
Laurence Stephen Lowry R.A. (British, 1887-1976). An Industrial Town. Signed limited edition off-set lithograph (no.490/500). Titled lower left. Signed L S Lowry, lower right margin. Glazed and mounted in a slim metallic frame. Image measures 59.5cm x 43.7cm
Estimate: £1000 – £2000

Large two handled milk pail, 'Pure Milk'

Lot 913: Large two handled milk pail, ‘Pure Milk’
Large two handled milk pail ‘Pure Milk’, with black transfers to side depicting two cows, circa late 19th to early 20th Century, height 23.5cm, diameter 32.5cm approx.
Estimate: £250 – £350

Troika Pottery rectangular 'slab' vase

Lot 1004: Troika Pottery rectangular ‘slab’ vase
Troika Pottery rectangular ‘slab’ vase, base reads ‘Troika Cornwall AP’, height 17cm, width 11cm, depth 4.5cm approx.
Estimate: £80 – £120

Designer Desire: Mary Ellen Best

Montage of paintings by Mary Ellen Best

I love going out for a walk around dusk, when people have turned on their lights, but haven’t yet drawn the curtains. You can get a sneaky look inside and see how they’ve furnished and decorated their homes. I think that’s why I was first attracted to the works of this week’s artist.

Mary Ellen Best (1809-1891) was an English watercolour artist, primarily concentrating on English – and later on, German – domestic interior scenes. She was born in York, the daughter of Dr Charles Best, a physician who worked at the York Lunatic Asylum (now Bootham Park Hospital). Her mother was Mary Norcliffe Dalton, the daughter of a Yorkshire landowner. She was brought up, along with her younger sister, Rosamond, in Little Blake Street (now Duncombe Place) near the west end of York Minster.

Best showed artistic promise from a young age, having art lessons at boarding school during her teenage years. As a young woman, she produced and sold many paintings and also exhibited widely.

As well as her own home, Best painted a number of studies of the Norcliffe family’s East Yorkshire home, Langton Park. There are many well-to-do town & country house drawing rooms, sitting rooms, dining rooms, music rooms etc. But it’s the ‘below stairs’ views that I find most interesting; the servant’s quarters, the kitchens and the more modest cottage interiors.

After the death of her parents and grandmother, from whom she inherited handsome sums each time, Best’s artistic output decreased. After she married German schoolmaster, Johann Anton Phillip Sary in 1840, the number of paintings she produced lessened even further until they virtually dried up after giving birth to and raising a son and daughter.

In 1985, a biography entitled The World of Mary Ellen Best was written by Caroline Davidson. In it, she calculated that Best produced over 1,500 paintings in her lifetime. Copies of the book are available at Abe Books and Amazon.

You can also find many more details about life on the Women of York blog and essay, Negotiating Identity: Mary Ellen Best and The Status of Female Victorian Artists.

Self-portrait by Mary Ellen Best, 1839
Self-portrait by Mary Ellen Best, 1839 (credit)

Additional image credits:
Askart

Designer Desire: Stuart Walton

Montage of Stuart Walton artworks

Stuart Walton (b. 1933) is a self-taught fine art painter, born in Dewsbury and raised in the Middleton area of Leeds. He showed artistic promise from a young age, winning art competitions whilst at school. However, being a ‘working class lad’, he took a job as a sign writer at Lewis’s, a department store in Leeds city centre.

In the 1970s, he gave up his job of Assistant Display Manager to paint full time. In 1975, he was appointed first Yorkshire Television Fine Arts Fellow.

His ‘northern industrial’ subject matter often contains repeated motifs; rows of red brick terraces, smoking chimneys, clothes drying on a washing line and Victorian street lamps.

During the late 1990s and early 2000s, Stuart suffered from deteriorating eye sight forcing him to cease producing artworks. Thankfully, his eyesight has since been treated and Stuart continues to paint to this day.

Stewart Walton is a very talented artist who I used to work with in the Display Studio at Lewis’s on the Headrow in the late 60’s. He was producing at that time acrylics on canvas depicting old streets of Leeds mainly Holbeck, Armley, Beeston and Hunslet. Due to inner city re generation they were demolishing properties in these areas faster that Stewart could paint them so we got together to do some photo shoots. I took colour reversal pictures that Stewart was able to copy and between us we were able to make a considerable record. From a recollection of a person named ‘Kenneth’, Secret Leeds forum, August 2009

The Hepworth Wakefield and the Walker Art Gallery in Liverpool hold examples of his work in their permanent collections.

You can purchase original vintage artworks and limited edition prints at auction and on eBay.

Portrait of Stuart Waltoncredit

Additional image credits:
Artnet