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William Bowyer (artist)


William Bowyer RA (25 May 1926 – 1 March 2015) was a British portrait and landscape painter, who worked in a traditional manner.

William Bowyer was born in Leek, Staffordshire. He studied at Burslem School of Art and the Royal College of Art, London, where his tutors included Ruskin Spear and Carel Weight.

In 1963, he won the City of London Art Award. 1971–82, he was Head of Fine Art at Maidstone College of Art. In 1988, the National Portrait Gallery acquired his portraits of miners´ leader, Arthur Scargill, and cricketer, Viv Richards. The same year the MCC commissioned him to paint the bi-centenary game at Lord's.

Although a regular exhibitor in club and group shows, and the Royal Academy Summer Exhibition, his first London solo show was not until 1983, when a retrospective was held at Messum's gallery.

His work was "modern traditional" figurative painting. Strong influences come from predecessors such as John Constable and J.M.W. Turner. Landscapes concentrate on the River Thames and the Suffolk coast. His love of cricket also leads to subject matter.

Ken Howard RA has commented:

The content of his pictures is the artist's life, whether it be his beloved river at Hammersmith, Walberswick in Suffolk – where he escapes whenever possible – his friends and family, as seen in his strong and challenging portraits, or his life-long love of cricket. Bill Bowyer's work communicates with us directly. It gives us a way of seeing the world and above all it is life enhancing.


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