Ada Swanwick

Betty Swanwick
Born Ada Elizabeth Edith Swanwick
1915
London
Died 1989
Nationality British
Education Goldsmiths College
Royal College of Art
Central School of Arts and Crafts
Occupation Artist and educator

Ada Swanwick or Betty Swanwick RA (1915 – 1989) was a British artist, novelist and art teacher.[1] She was head of illustration at Goldsmiths College and is known for her work for London Transport and an album cover for Genesis.[2]

Life

Ada Elizabeth Edith Swanwick was born in Forest Hill in London in 1915. Her father, Henry Gerard Swanwick, was in the naval reserve. Her father did marine water colours.[3] She was inspired by her father and her mother, Ethel Priscilla (née Bacon)[2] gave her pencils which she had retrieved from shipwrecks on the Scilly Isles.[4]

Swanwick enrolled at Goldsmiths College at the age of fifteen and by 1934 she was simultaneously attending classes at Goldsmith's, the Royal College of Art and the Central School of Arts and Crafts. She was a student of Edward Bawden. This academic activity continued until 1936.

Swanwick started to create work for London Transport in 1936 and she continued to create posters for them unitil 1954.[3]

In 1945 she published the first of her novels The Cross Purposes in 1945.[2] She published, Hoodwinked which featured pencil illustrations.[4]

In 1951 the Regatta and the Rocket restaurants at the Festival of Britain included murals by Ben Nicholson[5] and Swanwick. She would later create another mural for Evelina Children's Hospital in 1960.[2]

The cover for Genesis's 1973 album Selling England by the Pound was a painting by Swanwick titled The Dream.[6] The original painting did not feature a lawn mower; the band had Swanwick add it later as an allusion to the song "I Know What I Like" as Swanwick told them that she had not enough time to paint a new picture for their cover.[6] Her drawings could take 200 hours to create and she had strong views. She was appalled to find that her students did not have to attend life drawing classes.[2]

Swanwick died in 1989. Her life and the intriguing paintings that she made after 1965 are included in the book by her fiend Paddy Rossmore.[7]

Works include

References

  1. "Royal Academy of Arts Collections - Person". www.racollection.org.uk. Retrieved 2017-03-05.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 Ada Sanwick, ODNB, Retrieved 6 October 2016
  3. 1 2 Betty Swanwick, London Transport Museum, Retrieved 5 October 2016
  4. 1 2 ??, Royal Academy Collection, Retrieved 5 October 2016
  5. Pleasure Dome, The Guardian, Retrieved 6 October 2016
  6. 1 2 Bowler & Dray 1992, p. 81.
  7. Paddy Rossmore; Barry Viney (2008). Betty Swanwick: Artist & Visionary. Chris Beetles Gallery. ISBN 978-1-905738-03-8.

Bibliography

  • Bowler, Dave; Dray, Bryan (1992). Genesis: A Biography. Sidgwick & Jackson Ltd. ISBN 978-0-283-06132-5. 
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