Stanley Roy Badmin

Stanley Roy Badmin (1906–1989) was an English painter and etcher particularly noted for his book illustrations and landscapes.

Biography

Badmin was born in Sydenham in 1906, and went on to study at Camberwell School of Arts and Crafts and the Royal College of Art, London; he became one of the youngest ever associate members of the Royal Watercolour Society at the age of only 26. He taught at a number of art schools in London, teaching at the Central School of Art in the 1950s.

During World War II Badmin worked for the UK's Ministry of Information, before joining the RAF.

A major retrospective exhibition of his work was held in 1985 to coincide with the publication of his biography.

Badmin died in Bignor, West Sussex, in 1989.

Work

February, one of Badmin's illustrations for the Shell Guide to Trees and Shrubs, showing his characteristic treatment of landscape and of trees

Badmin worked primarily in watercolour. He was particularly inspired by the English rural landscape, and was especially noted for his detailed yet evocative paintings of trees. His work shows strong affinities with contemporary neo-romantic artists such as Graham Sutherland, John Piper and Eric Ravilious. His greatest public recognition came through his book illustration and advertising work, which was also largely based on English landscape subjects.

During the 1930s, Badmin began to receive commissions for magazine illustration; he produced his first book illustrations in 1937 (Highways and Byways of Essex by Clifford Bax, with further illustrations by F. L. Griggs). He wrote and illustrated three books for Puffin, the children's imprint of Penguin Books, one of which (Trees in Britain, 1943) has been described as "one of the most beautiful illustrated books of [the 20th] century".[1] The book was so successful it later became adopted as a set text by an agricultural college.[2]

Some of Badmin's most well-known work was commissioned by Shell; he worked on advertising art and book illustration for the popular Shell Guides series during the 1950s. His style also became familiar to the British travelling public through his work for London Transport and a series of posters for British Railways, among other clients.

Badmin usually signed his work "S. R. Badmin", and is most widely known as such.

References

Sources

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