Flora Twort

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Flora Twort (18931985) was an English painter.

Twort began painting at the age of four, and was educated at South Hampstead High School, the London School of Art, the London Polytechnic and the Slade School of Art. At the end of World War I she moved to Petersfield, Hampshire where she ran a secondhand bookshop at Numbers 1 and 2 The Square, in partnership with two other young women. The shop also sold hand-made jewellery, pottery and textiles and gained a reputation as one of the finest book shops in the South of England.

Her studio was above this shop until 1948, when the three partners decided to give up the shop and Twort moved to a studio in the nearby Church Path. Her work was exhibited in the Royal Academy and other London galleries, and she continued to paint until she was 81.

Her pictures, usually watercolours, typically contain local scenes of Petersfield which are filled with people and animals, with such subjects as The Square on Market Day, or the fair on Petersfield Heath. She also produced drawings in pencil, crayon, charcoal and pastel, including some fine portraits.

Twort was a friend of Nevil Shute.

On her death she bequeathed her studio cottage and pictures to Hampshire County Council. A selection of her pictures is now displayed in her old studios, which have become the Flora Twort Gallery; the selection is changed twice per year. Hampshire County Council has also put 600 of her pictures into the Flora Twort Collection, a searchable online gallery.

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