David Inshaw

David Inshaw (born 21 March 1943 in Wednesfield, Staffordshire, England) is a British artist who sprang to public attention in 1973[1] when his painting The Badminton Game was exhibited at the ICA Summer Studio exhibition in London. The painting was subsequently acquired by the Tate Gallery [2] and is one of several paintings from the 1970s that won him critical acclaim and a wide audience. Others include The Raven, Our days were a joy and our paths through flowers, She did not turn, The Cricket Game and Presentiment.

Contents

Career

David Inshaw studied at Beckenham School of Art in 1959-63 and the Royal Academy Schools, London, in 1963-66. A teaching post at the West of England College of Art, Bristol, in 1966-75 was followed by a two-year fellowship in Creative Art at Trinity College, Cambridge, in 1975-77. Inshaw moved to Devizes, Wiltshire, in 1971 and formed the Broadheath Brotherhood with Graham and Ann Arnold in 1972. The three artists were joined by Peter Blake, Jann Haworth, and Graham and Annie Ovenden in 1975, when the group was renamed the Brotherhood of Ruralists. The Ruralists exhibited together for the first time at the Royal Academy Summer Exhibition in 1976, and Inshaw left the group seven years later, in 1983. He moved to Clyro near Hay-on-Wye in 1989 but returned to Devizes in 1995 and has lived there since then.

Inshaw's paintings are held in many private and public collections, including the Arts Council of Great Britain, Bristol City Museum and Art Gallery, the British Council, the Department of the Environment, the Royal West of England Academy, Tate Britain and the Wiltshire Heritage Museum.

A major new book on Inshaw's life and work was published in 2010 [3] and the David Inshaw website and on-line gallery was launched in 2011.

Selected exhibitions

Filmography

References

  1. ^ Edward Lucie-Smith. 'New British Realists.' The Sunday Times Colour Supplement, 14th October 1973.
  2. ^ The Tate Gallery 1980-82: Illustrated Catalogue of Acquisitions. Tate Gallery, London, 1984, p.143.
  3. ^ Andrew Lambirth. David Inshaw: Between Fantasy and Reality. Tabretts Fine Art, Bath, 2010.
  4. ^ David Inshaw. Academy Editions, London, 1978.
  5. ^ Martin Postle. 'The Badminton Game.' In: Art of the Garden, Tate Publishing, London, 2004, pp.122-23.
  6. ^ Rachel Campbell-Johnston. 'Pastoral Magical.' The Times, 25th September 2004, pp.18-19.

External links