Prints & Fine Art

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'The Mirror, 1910' by Robert Lewis ReidRobert Lewis Reid was an American painter of landscapes and portraits during the ...
16/06/2026

'The Mirror, 1910' by Robert Lewis Reid

Robert Lewis Reid was an American painter of landscapes and portraits during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. He was born in 1862 and studied at the Boston Museum of Fine Arts School, the Arts Student League in New York, and the Academie Julian in Paris. He worked in New York where he became a member of the ‘Ten American Painters,’ an impressionist group that rebelled against the traditionalism of contemporary art in America. Reid died in Clifton Springs, New York, in 1929.

Born in 1963, Tracy Rees has a creative background in graphic design, pottery and illustration. She captures a dreamlike...
15/06/2026

Born in 1963, Tracy Rees has a creative background in graphic design, pottery and illustration. She captures a dreamlike quality in her paintings, infusing the feeling of home and a sense of joy. Drawn from her memories of childhood and time spent with her grandparents, Rees uses muted tones to convey a rustic nostalgia in her work.
Rees enjoys painting playful scenes of animals with their eloquent body language. Sometimes caught lounging on seats or amongst the garden flowers, she uses comforting colours that bring a warmth to her work.

Born in 1858, Maurice Prendergast was one of the great American impressionists.The son of poor parents, Prendergast bega...
14/06/2026

Born in 1858, Maurice Prendergast was one of the great American impressionists.

The son of poor parents, Prendergast began to earn his living very early as a commercial artist. With the little money he was able to save, he went to Paris in 1886, and for three years worked at the Académie Julian and the Atelier Colarossi. The reputation of this independent artist was slow in coming, and this lack of recognition, as Suzanne La Follette notes in Art in America, is "a severe judgement of American taste during his time".

In 1908 Prendergast participated in the famous exhibition of the Eight, derisively dubbed the Ashcan School, which brought together the best American artists of the time.

He was a leading figure in early American Modernism and his work is included in over 90 museum collections including Metropolitan Museum of Art, Museum of Modern Art, Smithsonian, American Art Museum and the Whitney Museum of American Art.
Maurice Prendergast lived the rest of his life in New York, in a studio in Washington Square, where he died in 1924.

12/06/2026

Thierry Poncelet, born in Brussels in 1946, was encouraged to paint from childhood by his grandmother, a noted portrait artist. After finishing his education, he worked with picture restorer Max Massot, learning restoration techniques before deciding to become a full-time oil painter. He soon specialised in whimsical dog portraits, which he calls “Aristochiens”. The idea began while restoring an antique portrait for an art dealer: bored by the sitter’s expression, he replaced her head with that of his own golden cocker. Instead of objecting, the dealer commissioned more works. Poncelet describes his paintings as a blend of his two greatest passions: ancestral portraits and dogs. His canine subjects take on distinctly human roles, from Victorian ladies to military officers, creating playful scenes inspired by eighteenth- and nineteenth-century society. Internationally exhibited and widely collected, his art is admired less as mockery than as a way of giving dogs humanity.

11/06/2026

On 11 June 2026, we mark 250 years since the birth of John Constable, one of Britain’s most beloved landscape painters – and one of its most quietly radical. Today, The Hay Wain is so familiar it can be easy to underestimate, but in 1821 its subject was far from grand. No ancient ruins, dramatic Alps or Italian sunsets: just a working corner of Suffolk, a wagon crossing the millpond at Flatford, haymakers in the distance and W***y Lott’s cottage beside the water.

For Constable, this was exactly the point. Born in East Bergholt, he believed he would “paint his own places best”, returning again and again to the Stour Valley of his childhood. The everyday details of rural life – towpaths, lock gates, cottages, weathered wood, moving water and changing skies – became the material of serious art. His large “six-footers”, including The Hay Wain, gave these local scenes the scale and ambition usually reserved for history painting.

Although Constable’s landscapes are often described as nostalgic, they were also highly worked and deeply modern. He sketched outdoors, studied cloud formations with almost scientific attention, and built his major exhibition paintings in the studio from years of observation. He called the sky “the chief organ of sentiment”, and in The Hay Wain the billowing clouds are as essential as the figures below, giving the scene its light, movement and emotional charge.

The painting did not sell when first shown at the Royal Academy, but its impact was felt abroad. Sent to the Paris Salon in 1824, The Hay Wain caused a sensation and helped earn Constable a gold medal from King Charles X. French artists were struck by its freshness, directness and devotion to nature.

Two and a half centuries after his birth, Constable’s achievement lies not simply in preserving an image of rural England, but in making the ordinary monumental. In his hands, a familiar landscape became charged with memory, feeling and invention.

09/06/2026

Born in 1831 in St Thomas, West Indies, Camille Pissarro was the son of a Creole mother and a Portuguese Jewish father. Unhappy working in his father’s store, he left for Venezuela in 1852 with a Danish painter, then settled in Paris in 1855, where Corot and Monet strongly influenced him. By 1863 his work appeared in the Salon des Refusés, yet despite painting landscapes outdoors between 1866 and 1869, he remained poor. In 1870 he fled to London during the Franco-Prussian War and later learned that hundreds of his paintings had been destroyed. Undeterred, he joined the first Impressionist exhibition in 1874 and became the only artist to exhibit in all eight. He also introduced Gauguin and Seurat to the circle. Later, worsening eyesight forced him indoors, but he continued painting and earned lasting admiration for both his art and his generous, principled character.

Born in Italy in 1691, Giovanni Paolo Panini was an Italian painter and architect. He is best known for being a ‘vedutis...
08/06/2026

Born in Italy in 1691, Giovanni Paolo Panini was an Italian painter and architect. He is best known for being a ‘vedutisti’, a type of painter specialising in detailed, large-scale panoramas. He effortlessly captured views of Rome, including the Pantheon.
He is also admired for the ‘capriccio’ element of his work; the practice of combining both real and imagined buildings or ancient ruins into a landscape. This style of work gave a sense of fantasy and surrealism.

Hugh O’Neill was born in Belfast, in Northern Ireland, in 1959. He began drawing and painting at an early age and by the...
07/06/2026

Hugh O’Neill was born in Belfast, in Northern Ireland, in 1959. He began drawing and painting at an early age and by the age of ten he was not only an accomplished artist but also a gifted musician, teaching himself four different musical instruments.
The member of a working-class family of 8, he was expected to earn a living as soon as possible and, at the age of 17, he obtained a job as a government civil servant. He remained only a few years in the dreary role of Clerical Officer before he decided to pursue his artistic passions and was accepted onto the Honours Fine Art Degree course at the University of Ulster in Belfast.

On completing his degree he found opportunities to exhibit his artwork in and around Belfast during the time of the troubles to be fairly scarce and he made a living instead travelling with his band. However, art was always his primary focus and he took the decision to move to the United States, where the opportunities for artists were far greater. He has now exhibited at prestigious galleries in New York, Washington DC and Palm Beach.

Hugh O’Neill’s approach to his oil painting is direct, bold and figurative. He comments: "Amidst the colour and tonal variations that nature provides I stand in awe...nature is the ultimate teacher and I a willing pupil...If my paintings can stir some emotion in the viewer...some genuine interest, then that will be the measure of my success. The beauty and visual stimulation I experience at a scene is my sole motive for the beginning of my own creative process."

He spends time each year working through locations between Europe and The United States. He maintains a working studio both in Ireland and in Florida and his work is now represented in many private, corporate, and gallery collections.

Morning Reflections by Lilia Orlova-HolmesLilia was born in Eastern Europe and now lives and works in England. Her paint...
05/06/2026

Morning Reflections by Lilia Orlova-Holmes

Lilia was born in Eastern Europe and now lives and works in England. Her paintings are in many collections around the world and her loose and free brush-work expresses her own emotive intuition. The work is anchored in figurations which are neither representational nor observational, but are explorations of feeling�awoken by the artist’s search for inner meaning.

Lilia is inspired by the way nature creates endless variety without judgement on what should or should not be. Her work has been described by a leading art critic as "the ethereal beauty of Lilia’s�fantastical garden-scapes is mixed with a loose Impressionist technique. Brush-marks seem to fall off the canvas. Lilia's distinct Japanese calligraphic influence allows earthly splendour to fill the room".

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