3 #MARCH #WorldWildlifeDay
‘Contentment – leopards’
Cuthbert Edmund Swan (1870-1931). Oil on canvas. 61 x 100.3 cm. Exhibited London, Royal Academy, 1920.
#CuthbertEdmundSwan #CESwam #wildlife #leopards #BritishArt #wildlife #biodiversity
Summer lilies, pink & yellow against a green landscape and blue sky - the summer section in Hockney’s ‘A Year In Normandie’
Hay bails in a green/yellow field with five young trees in the background and woodland beyond - part of the early autumn section of Hockney’s ‘A Year In Normandie’
David Hockney’s entirely beautiful ‘A Year In Normandie’ perfectly presented (and for free) at the Serpentine North Gallery today #DavidHockney #LondonExhibitions #21stCenturyArt #BritishArt
The painting captures a specifically British pre-wedding custom, the hen party, but artist Beryl Cook treats it as more than comic spectacle. She makes working-class and middle-class women the stars of public life by being visible, celebratory, self-possessed, and fully entitled to pleasure. Her art often centered women in pubs, clubs, cafés, and streets, recording the sociability of everyday life with affection rather than condescension. Five women cluster together in a tight, cheerful group, filling nearly the whole picture. Their bodies are rounded and buoyant, with Cook’s signature exaggeration making them feel larger than life, confident, and impossible to ignore. At the center is the bride-to-be, wearing a large tall white party hat trimmed with balloons, ribbons, and floral decorations. The others lean close around her in bright dresses and tops, their faces rosy, amused, and alert with shared excitement. Red lipstick, flushed cheeks, and glossy accessories heighten the mood of a night out before marriage. The scene feels crowded but affectionate, with no background distraction pulling attention away from the women’s camaraderie. Cook turns the group into a monument of laughter, ritual, and collective female presence. These are not idealized bodies or polished society beauties. They are vivid, social, ordinary women made unforgettable through humor, scale, and warmth. Made in 1995, “Hen Party II” belongs to Cook’s mature period, when her instantly recognizable style had become one of the most widely loved in Britain. A plausible real-life spark for this image survives in local Plymouth memory when a specific woman’s 1995 hen night reportedly inspired both this painting and a related work. That rootedness matters. Cook was not inventing fantasy women from a distance. She was observing the social worlds around her and transforming them into democratic icons. The humor is real, but so is the dignity for a record of female friendship and public joy.
“Hen Party II” by Beryl Cook (British) - Oil on board / 1995 - Glasgow Museums Resource Centre (Glasgow, Scotland) #WomenInArt #WomensArt #WomanArtist #WomenArtists #BerylCook #Cook #BritishArt #GlasgowMuseums #GlasgowMuseumsResourceCentre #artText #art #1990sArt #BritishArtist #WomenPaintingWomen
Inside a large factory canteen during World War I, women workers fill nearly the entire picture plane. To the left, tables are crowded with women in dark overalls and cloth caps, some seated shoulder to shoulder, some turned toward one another in conversation, some bent slightly with fatigue. To the right, a line forms at a serving counter. In the center, two young women walk toward us arm in arm, their bodies close and steady, while another woman beside them pauses and looks outward. Their clothing is practical rather than decorative with loose work dresses, aprons, caps, and sturdy dark shoes. Skin tones are mostly light, and the scene is lit by a soft industrial glow that catches faces, cuffs, and white cups in scattered points across the room. The space feels noisy, warm, and briefly relieved from labor, yet still disciplined by the rhythms of wartime production. English artist Flora Lion, a successful portrait painter, gained access during the First World War to factories in Leeds and Bradford and turned that access into something more than documentary record. Here, she paints not machinery but pause, appetite, exhaustion, companionship, and social change. The women are workers, but they are also individuals sharing fellowship in a newly public working world. The two central figures, linked arm in arm, carry much of the painting’s meaning including solidarity, confidence, and a new kind of visibility for women whose paid wartime labor altered everyday gender roles. The factory canteen itself matters too. It was part of a wider wartime welfare effort, meant to sustain productivity, but for many women it also meant regular hot meals and a measure of care inside harsh industrial life. Rather than glorifying war, Lion gives dignity to the home front and to the communal strength of women whose labor powered it.
“Women’s Canteen at Phoenix Works, Bradford” by Flora Lion (English) - Oil on canvas / 1918 - Imperial War Museums (London, England) #WomenInArt #WomensArt #WomanArtist #WomenArtists #FloraLion #ImperialWarMuseums #IWM #art #arttext #BlueskyArt #BritishArt #WWIart #arte #womenpaintingwomen #1910sArt
Joseph Mallord William Turner, "Rockets and Blue Lights (Close at Hand) to Warn Steamboats of Shoal Water," oil on canvas, 1840; The Clark. #landscape #seascape #turner #paintings #peintures #oiloncanvas #oilpainting #britishart #museum #artgallery
MARCH #WorldWildlifeDay
‘A leopard and her cubs with a fresh kill’
Harry Dixon (b. 1861). Watercolor on paper. 38 x 50 cm. 1909.
#HarryDixon #HDixon #wildlife #leopards #BritishArt #wildlife #biodiversity
Churchyard textures from a new piece. #art #britishart #churchyard
Commissioned by John Baker & Co., the painting shows women making 4.5-inch shells at the Kilnhurst Steel Works in Rotherham, England during the First World War. As men left for military service, women entered heavy industry in unprecedented numbers, and British artist Stanhope Alexander Forbes records that shift with unusual seriousness. This is not a symbolic allegory of labor, but a hard, dangerous workplace of heat, weight, and precision. Inside a dark steelworks, a group of adult women labors around a blazing industrial process. The space is crowded with soot-black beams, shadowed platforms, and a steep stair rising at left. At the center, the furnace and freshly heated metal cast orange light across the workers’ faces, aprons, sleeves, and skirts. Several women bend, lift, guide, or brace themselves around a long glowing form being moved toward a steam hydraulic press. Their bodies are strong, coordinated, and alert rather than ornamental with sleeves rolled, posture forward, and attention fixed on timing and heat. Some wear caps or scarves. Others have their hair pulled back. The light catches flushed skin, pale cuffs, and the hot shine of metal against the near-black interior, making the women’s teamwork the real center of the picture. In the foreground, two women lean over a pile of hollow metal shell casings, creating an intimate counterpoint to the larger machinery and busier industrial floor behind them. Munition workers were often nicknamed “canaries” because chemical exposure could yellow the skin and hair, a reminder that patriotic labor also carried bodily risk. By 1918, Forbes was an established painter associated with the Newlyn School, and the work feels both documentary and humane. Rather than isolate a single heroine, he presents a collective portrait of women whose skill kept wartime production moving. The painting honors endurance and mutual reliance while making visible a history of women’s labor that was essential and too often temporary.
“The Munition Girls” by Stanhope Alexander Forbes (British) - Oil on canvas / 1918 - Science Museum (London) #WomenInArt #StanhopeAlexanderForbes #ScienceMuseumLondon #art #artText #BlueskyArt #IndustrialArt #WWIart #BritishArtist #ArtUK #WomenAtWork #CornishArt #BritishArt #1910sArt #NewlynSchool
In a broad marble marketplace washed with pale morning light, women gather in small, emotionally distinct groups. Several exhausted bacchants lie asleep or half-awake on the stone pavement, their bodies slack, their hair loosened, their white and cream garments slipping into soft folds around them. One red-haired woman leans forward as if just rising; another sits upright, dazed, while a townswoman in deep blue bends toward her with food or drink. At the left, women cluster around baskets and provisions. At the center and rear, more figures stand in calm, vertical lines beneath a garlanded wall and near a monumental doorway. The contrast is striking: some women are disheveled, collapsed, and vulnerable; others are composed, attentive, and protective. British artist Lawrence Alma-Tadema (born in the Netherlands) orchestrates the whole scene through textures like cool stone, translucent drapery, dark hair, warm skin, and the hush of dawn after a long night. The title refers not to the sleeping revelers alone, but to the civic women of Amphissa, whose compassion is the real subject. Alma-Tadema drew the scene from ancient Greek writer Plutarch’s account of the Thyiades, female followers of Dionysus, who wandered in ritual ecstasy from Phocis and fell asleep in Amphissa’s marketplace. Though the cities were hostile, the local women formed a protective barrier around them, fed them when they awoke, and helped them return safely. For a Victorian audience, this historical episode became a moral image of female courage, restraint, and mercy. Rather than staging battle or scandal, Alma-Tadema centers women caring for women across political and social difference. Painted in 1887, when he was at the height of his fame for lavish classical reconstructions, this work turns antiquity into an ethical drama. Civilization is not triumph or punishment, but collective tenderness while the cool marble and luminous fabrics make care itself look monumental.
“The Women of Amphissa” by Sir Lawrence Alma-Tadema (Dutch-born British) - Oil on canvas / 1887 - The Clark Art Institute (Williamstown, Massachusetts) #WomenInArt #LawrenceAlmaTadema #AlmaTadema #ClarkArt #VictorianArt #ClassicalArt #blueskyart #art #arttext #BritishArt #ClarkArtInstitute #1880sArt
3 #MARCH #WorldWildlifeDay
‘A pair of woodcock on the wing in a pine forest’
George Edward Lodge (1860-1954). Oil on canvas. N.D.
#GeorgeEdwardLodge #GELodge #BritishArt #wildlife #birds #woodcock #ornithology #biodiversity
Learn all about British artistic heavyweights Turner and Constable in a special exhibition at Tate Britain, and find out why they were both rivals and originals.
👉 saltertonartsreview.com/2026/03/turn...
#tate #tatebritain #johnconstable #britishart #salisburycathedral
‘George Edward Lodge FZS (Fellow of the Zoological Society of London), was a British illustrator of birds and an authority on falconry.’ Wikipedia
3 #MARCH #WorldWildlifeDay
‘A golden eagle on a rocky outcrop’
George Edward Lodge FZS (1860-1954 👉ALT)
Watercolour and bodycolour on paper. N.D.
#GeorgeEdwardLodge #GELodge #BritishArt #wildlife #birds #eagles #GoldenEagle #ornithology #biodiversity
BCA March Newsletter now live. Read about the fab new art and artists here:
shorturl.at/Iyl6f
#britishart #contemporaryart #fineart #oilpaintings #landscape #seascape #finearts #britishpainter #artonline #abstractart
Eye Candy: Walter Dexter still life. For detail crops, links & info, see my Lines and Colors post: linesandcolors.com/2026/02/05/e...
#art #painting #stilllife #stilllifepainting #walterdexter #ukart #britishart #englishart
Black and white drypoint etching of a woman in ballet costume sleeping in a chair.
Laura Knight, 1877-1970
Dancer Sleeping
drypoint, 1925
(Mechanical reproduction, "from a proof in the possession of the Artist")*
📷me
#WorldSleepDay 🎨 #BritishArt
‘Allen William Seaby Is best known as an ornithological painter and printmaker, and Professor of Fine Art at the University of Reading. He was the author of several art books for students, and also wrote and illustrated books for children. ‘Wikipedia https://www.invaluable.com/artist/seaby-allen-william-2n1zpvwvzh/sold-at-auction-prices/ 28-2-24
3 #MARCH #WorldWildlifeDay
‘Two Birds’ Allen W. Seaby (1867-1953 👉ALT)
Woodcut. 18cm x 21cm. N.D.
👉 ALT
#wildlife #birds #AWSeaby #AllenWSeaby #BritishArt #ornithology
William Etty - Pandora Crowned by the Seasons, 1824 P(second version, Oil on canvas, 87.6 x 111.8 cm (34.4 x 44 in). Leeds Art Gallery The oil-on-canvas painting depicts the Greek mythological figure Pandora. In the scene, she is being crowned with a wreath by personifications of the four seasons, who are shown as cherubic and ethereal characters floating above her.
mixed with some critics hailing him as a natural heir to the Old Masters, others, including The Times, attacked his paintings as "indecent" and "too luscious for the public eye" His home city holds the largest and best collection of Etty's work in the country. #artist #ArtHistory
#BritishArt
‘Allen William Seaby Is best known as an ornithological painter and printmaker, and Professor of Fine Art at the University of Reading. He was the author of several art books for students, and also wrote and illustrated books for children.’ Wikipedia
3 #MARCH #WorldWildlifeDay
‘A Hare in a Snowy Landscape’
Allen W. Seaby (1867-1953 👉ALT)
Woodcut in Colours. 9" x 12.5". N.D.
#wildlife #hare #WINTER #AWSeaby #AllenWSeaby #BritishArt
‘Allen William Seaby Is best known as an ornithological painter and printmaker, and Professor of Fine Art at the University of Reading. He was the author of several art books for students, and also wrote and illustrated books for children.’ Wikipedia
3 #MARCH #WorldWildlifeDay
‘Nightingale’ Allen W. Seaby (1867-1953 👉ALT)
Colour woodblock, on laid japan paper, from the published edition of 150 impressions, signed in pencil, and numbered. N.D.
#wildlife #birds #nightingale #AWSeaby #AllenWSeaby #BritishArt #ornithology
Mia Tarney
Contemporary British artist
Duchess Peony, 2007
oil on linen
54" x 60"
#MiaTarney
#Britishart
‘Allen William Seaby Is best known as an ornithological painter and printmaker, and Professor of Fine Art at the University of Reading. He was the author of several art books for students, and also wrote and illustrated books for children.’ Wikipedia https://www.invaluable.com/artist/seaby-allen-william-2n1zpvwvzh/sold-at-auction-prices/
3 #MARCH #WorldWildlifeDay
‘Osprey’
Allen W. Seaby (1867-1953 👉ALT)
Colour woodcut, signed and numbered. Ca. 1918.
#wildlife #birds #osprey #AWSeaby #AllenWSeaby #BritishArt #ornithology
So excited to show you my new shop devoted to showcasing my original art #UKGiftAM #UKGiftHour #britishart
thebritishcrafthouse.co.uk/shop/art-by-...
@mhhsbd.bsky.social @craftbizparty.bsky.social
Henry Moore studied at the Royal Academy of Art in London, yet he soon defied traditional academic methods. Moore abandoned the use of clay preparatory models and began to carve directly into the surface of stone and wood; he sought to enhance the inherent characteristics of his natural materials. Massive pre-Columbian and Neolithic stone carvings, as well as the experimental abstract forms of avant-garde artists such as Jean Arp, strongly influenced Moore. He focused on the feminine figure as an archetype of earthiness, fertility, and nurture. Composition is an early example of Moore's use of interlocking biomorphic forms: both the open cavities and the curvilinear, organic forms suggest anatomical features. Moore's gentle abstractions often recall the undulating hills of his native English countryside and thus further his equation of women with nature.
Composition
carved beechwood
1932
Henry Moore (1898-1986)
UK
#art #britishart #sculpture #modernsculpture #modernart #biomorphicart #biomorphism #biomorphicsculpture #henrymoore #uk #composition #carved #beechwood #c1932 #britishmodern #modernism #vintagemodern
Two women are posed closely beneath a fruiting branch in an aristocratic garden setting. At left, a pale-skinned seated woman wears a wide straw hat trimmed with flowers, pearl earrings, and a warm brown satin gown with white lace sleeves and light blue ribbon bows down the bodice. She gathers oranges and red berries into a white apron lifted across her lap. Her posture is upright yet relaxed, and she looks off to her left. At right, a brown-skinned woman stands slightly behind and above her, wearing a black dress with white lace trim, layered necklaces, earrings, and a jeweled headpiece with feathers. She raises one arm to pluck an orange while her other hand rests on the seated woman’s shoulder. Their touching hands, shared fruit, and overlapping bodies create a strong sense of connection and mutual presence. The painting’s power is in that intimacy. The composition has long been read through hierarchical labels, but visually the two sitters are linked by gesture, ornament, and scale. The standing woman meets our gaze with striking steadiness and occupies the upper right of the composition with authority. The fruit-gathering motif can suggest pastoral leisure, abundance, and cultivated refinement, yet it also stages a social relationship. The Wadsworth notes that another version (in Belgium) was later altered to erase the woman of African descent, making this canvas especially important as evidence of Black presence within 18th-century British elite portraiture and as a reminder of how art history has been edited, renamed, and reinterpreted over time. Stephen Slaughter was an English portrait painter associated with elite patrons in Britain and Ireland, later serving as Surveyor and Keeper of the King’s Pictures under George II. Slaughter’s careful handling of satin, lace, pearls, and skin tones supports a composition whose historical significance extends to now as a rare and compelling image of closeness, status, and Black visibility in Georgian Britain.
"Portrait of Two Women" by Stephen Slaughter (English) - Oil on canvas / c. 1750 - Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art (Hartford, Connecticut) #WomenInArt #art #artText #BlueskyArt #portrait #StephenSlaughter #Slaughter #1700s #WadsworthAtheneum #TheWadsworth #BritishArt #PortraitOfWomen #EnglishArtist
Historical image of George Brydges Rodney, 1st Baron Rodney
Reynolds didn't just capture faces; he crafted power. His portraits used classical poses and dramatic lighting to turn aristocrats into timeless icons. #arthistory #britishart
Contemporary Art in Britain | Why Are We So Suspicious of What We’re Good At?
Why does the phrase “contemporary art” make Britain uneasy?
youtu.be/R_I8IUeIkPc
#ContemporaryArt #BritishArt #ArtCollecting #ArtMarket #ArtWorld #BlackbirdRook #LivingArtists #CulturalCommentary
A double portrait shows two young women outdoors in a garden-like landscape. At left, Dido Elizabeth Belle, a young Black woman, leans forward in motion with a direct, lively gaze and smile, her head tilted toward us. She wears a luminous white satin dress with a low neckline, pearl jewelry, and a white turban topped with a dark feather. She carries a basket of grapes and peaches in her arm. At right, Lady Elizabeth Murray, a young white woman, sits in a pink-and-white silk gown with lace trim, floral hair ornaments, and a pearl choker. She holds an open book in one hand while the other reaches toward Dido, visually linking them. A blue drapery sweeps between them. Light blue sky opens behind Dido while deeper shade trees frame Elizabeth, creating a dynamic contrast of movement and poise. This rare dignified representation of a Black woman in 18th-century British portraiture presents Dido and Elizabeth as intimate companions and near social equals. Yet, it is also layered with hierarchy and coded symbolism as Elizabeth’s book and composed pose suggest education and gentility, while Dido’s fruit, feathered headwrap, and animated movement convey Georgian ideas of exoticism and empire. That tension is central to the work’s power. Dido, the daughter of a Royal Navy captain and an enslaved mother, was raised at Kenwood House in Lord Mansfield’s household, where she was educated and lived in relative comfort, but not as fully equal in domestic and social practice. As Lord Mansfield was one of Britain’s leading judges, Dido’s life also intersects with the legal history of slavery in Britain. He is closely associated with the landmark Somerset v Stewart (1772) decision, which limited the forced removal of an enslaved man from England without legal basis, while stopping short of abolishing slavery across the empire. This portrait’s warmth and visual closeness form a rare image of kinship and dignity shaped within a world still structured by racial and colonial inequality.
“Dido Elizabeth Belle and Lady Elizabeth Murray” by David Martin (Scottish) - Oil on canvas / c. 1778 - Scone Palace (Perth, Scotland) #WomenInArt #DavidMartin #artText #art #SconePalace #BlackPortraiture #ScottishArt #BritishArt #ScottishArtist #HistoricArt #PortraitofWomen #DidoElizabethBelle
There’s something deeply compelling about watching artists paint against changing light.
Landscape Artist Of The Year 2026 episode 6 captures that tension beautifully — skill, risk, and genuine personal vision under pressure.
hdclump.com/landscape-ar...
#LandscapeArt #CreativeProcess #BritishArt
John O'Connor
British artist
1913–2004
Painter, printmaker, & illustrator
#Britishart
BCA newsletter now live! Read about the fab new art and artists here:
shorturl.at/wgxkp
#newsletter #musings #thoughts #britishart #fineart #contemporaryart