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ARTIST: TOM CARR RHA
TITLE: " RIVER BARGE"

ARTIST. TOM CARR
TITLE. "RIVER BARGE"
DESCRIPTION. Irish impressionist oil by artist Tom Carr from the 1950/1960's. Super brush technique and painting skill depict this river scene with luminous impressionistic colours. A work by one of the modern Irish masters.
A fantastic collectable landscape.
A very nice painting painted in a impressionist style.
This is a lovely example of hIs work - it is a highly commercial piece with excellent provenance.
Signed right Tom Carr
Provenance Bell Gaallery Belfast - label verso
Lady Clark of Flaxpool House Taunton Somerset
CONDITION. Oil on canvas. Image size 39cm by 28cm and in very good untouched condition. May benefit from a light clean.
FRAME. Housed in its original black and gold Bell Gallery frame - a modern style gallery frame which compliments the picture 53cm by 43cm. In good condition and ready to hang.
BIOGRAPHY Tom Carr OBE, RUA (1909-1999)
A talented landscape artist and figurative painter, Tom Carr was born in County Antrim, Northern Ireland and encouraged to sketch by his watercolourist grandfather. In 1929 he attended the Slade School of Fine Art, London, where he studied drawing and painting under Henry Tonks and Wilson Steer. After two years study, Tom Carr travelled to Florence for six months, staying at the home of the artist Aubrey Waterfield (1874-1944).
Returning to London, he slowly built a reputation as a draughtsman and artist, exhibiting at several galleries. He painted watercolours as well as oil painting.
During this time he came to the attention of the history of art expert Kenneth Clark who recommended the purchase of Carr's Beach Scene at Dover Beach to Queen Elizabeth (later the Queen Mother). In the early 1930s, despite his love for the paintings of Claude, Degas, Corot and Sickert - an influence which never left him - he flirted briefly with non-representational art and became associated with various avant-garde groups in London such as the Objective Abstractionists as well as the Euston Road Group of artists, established by Pasmore, William Coldstream and Claude Rogers. In 1933, Carr took part in the Objective Abstractions Exhibition at the Zwemmer Gallery in 1934, but soon discovered that abstraction held no interest for him. He thus returned to figure painting, focusing on people seated by the seaside, often with dogs and cats in view; or children playing, or landscapes of County Down
Carr returned to Ulster just before the war and worked as an official war artist. However, the landscape of Northern Ireland became his principal subject, in both oils and watercolours. He taught art in a private school and later figure-drawing at the Belfast College of Art. Painting children became of his specialities. Following his wife's death in 1995, he moved to Norfolk where he focused on landscape painting of the local scenery. He was honoured with an MBE in 1974 for services to art in Ulster and became OBE in 1993. Tom Carr was a member of the Royal Society of Watercolour Painters and the Watercolour Society of Ireland. He was also a member of the Royal Ulster Academy of Arts.
Tom Carr's major exhibitions include:
1933 - Zwemmer Gallery, London: "Tom Carr, Victor Pasmore, Ceri Richards." 1989 RHA Gallery, Dublin: "Retrospective." 1997 Ulster Museum, Belfast; "The Red Sings Out." 1999 Eakin Gallery, Belfast.
His paintings are represented in several public collections, including:
Arts Council of Northern Ireland. AIB (Allied Irish Banks).
BIBLIOGRAPHY
The Irish Impressionists - Nat Gallery Ireland
Benezit - Artists Dictionary
Tom Carr - Eamonn Mallie
Listed at auction and galleries and art websites.
.Dictionary Victorian Painters -Wood Listed at auction and galleries and art websites.









POST
POSTAGE. UK professional post and pack with purpose puchased packing materials insurance included - £ 20 to UK.
International shipping rates apply.
I am happy to answer questions before you buy.
I am happy to answer questions before you buy. |