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PREVIEW: A review of Sir Terry Frost’s work

Besi Besemar June 30, 2014

Zimmer Stewart Gallery to exhibit the work of Sir Terry Frost during Arundel Festival.

Terry Frost: See Cyclists, Battersea (1947)
Terry Frost: See Cyclists, Battersea (1947)

As part of the Arundel Festival and Gallery Trail exhibition the Zimmer Stewart Gallery will be presenting a review of work by Sir Terry Frost, RA (1915-2003).

In collaboration with his estate, the gallery will show paintings using oil, goache and watercolour as well as works on paper and prints.

James Stewart, gallery director, says: “We have worked with Anthony Frost for a number of years, and now also Luke Frost, so it made sense to look back at the work of Terry Frost for the Arundel Festival and review his work in this context and close the centenary of his birth.”

“We have had unique access to select works which have not been seen for some time, and also pieces which people may not immediately associate with Sir Terry Frost, RA.”

With a career lasting over 60 years, Terry Frost is recognised as one of the UK’s foremost abstract painters, exhibiting regularly in London and throughout the world.

Having attended evening art classes from the age of 16, Terry Frost’s interest in painting started seriously when interned as a prisoner of war in Germany in 1943 with Adrian Heath. After the war he moved to St Ives and studied under Leonard Fuller at Camberwell school, or art under Passmore and Coldstream. In 1951 he worked as an assistant to Barbara Hepworth.

Terry Frost has held many teaching positions including Bath Academy, Leeds University, Leeds College of Art before becoming Artist in Residence at the department of Fine Art Reading University in 1965, later he was appointed the University’s Professor of Painting.

The owners of Badcock’s Gallery, in Sir Terry’s home town of Newlyn, said: “His unique ability to allow the joy of life to emanate from his work reduces the formal qualities of painting to a simplicity that is the unforgettable trade mark of this remarkable man.”

Printmaking always played a key role in his work. For Terry Frost painting and printing were inseparable, with one medium creating ideas for the other.

Elected a Royal Academician in 1992, he was knighted in 1998. He exhibited extensively in Britain and the United States, and his work is held in museums and galleries worldwide, including Tate Britain, the Victoria and Albert and the British Museum.

In 2000 the Royal Academy staged a major retrospective of Frost’s work to coincide with his 85th birthday.

In 2013 Terry Frost: A Painter’s Life was published to mark ten years since Terry Frost’s death. The author Roger Bristow has written the first full-length biography of the artist. The Zimmer Stewart Gallery will have signed copies available during the exhibition.

In early 2015 Tate St Ives will exhibit works by Terry Frost to mark the centenary of his birth.

For more imformation about the gallery, CLICK HERE: 

What: A review of the work of Sir Terry Frost

Where: Zimmer Stewart Gallery, 29 Tarrant Street, Arundel, West Sussex, BN18 9DG

When: August 1 – August 25

 

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