Etching - Graham Clarke 's characteristic 'arch topped' etchings are produced
entirely by hand using processes two hundred years "out of date",
from etching the copper plate, printing with the hand driven press to the hand
coloring. Such techniques are increasingly rare as graphic technology rushes
forward.
Graham Clarke - Graham Clarke,
author, illustrator and humorist, is one of Britain's most popular and best-selling printmakers. Graham Clarke has created some five hundred images of English rural life and history,
of the Bible and of the Englishman's view of Europe. Born in
1941, Clarke's upbringing in the austerity of war-time and post-war Britain, made him reliant on his own imaginative resources. Responding to the
comedy of everyday life, he brings his own unique brand of humour to his
interpretation of past and present history through the eyes of the common
man. Graham Clarke was educated at Beckenham ArtSchool, where he fell under the spell of Samuel Palmer's romantic and visionary
view of the Shoreham countryside. At the Royal College of Art he specialised
in illustration and printmaking, and pursued his interest in calligraphy.
With encouragement from Edward Bawden, Clarke began refining an individual
aesthetic, printing traditional landscapes marked by a sense of locality
and genre. Graduating in 1964, he benefited from the print boom of the
decade and, with commissions from Editions Alecto and London Transport
Publicity Department a promising career was launched. The publication in
1969 of his first hand-printed "livre d'artiste", Balyn and Balan
won recognition from the most influential patron and connoisseur of the
day, Kenneth Clark. Lord Clark also wrote enthusiastically in praise of
Vision of Wat Tyler: "the whole book is a splendid assertion that
craftsmen still exist and cannot be killed by materialism. A few idealists
are the only hope for decent values". Graham Clarke has attracted universal admiration for his revival of beautiful, hand-coloured
prints in the tradition of Thomas Rowlandson. The famous 'arched top' etchings,
with which Graham
Clarke established a widely successful reputation in Britain and overseas, came
to public attention in 1973 when the first of these, Dance by the Light
of the Moon, was exhibited in London at the Royal Academy of Arts Summer
Show, and sold out Examples of his work are held by Royal and public collections,
including the Victoria and Albert Museum, the British Museum, the Tate
Gallery and the National Library of Scotland in the United Kingdom, as
well as by Trinity College, Dublin, the Library of Congress in Washington,
D.C., the New York Public Library and the Hiroshima Peace Museum. Many
more are to be found on the walls of private homes all over the world,
collected systematically by devotees, as well as singly by ordinary art
loverswho "know what they like". For over thirty five years Clarke
has sustained a remarkable evolutionary development of his work, while
remaining true to a philosophy of life and to a democratic ideal which
he was already formulating as a schoolboy. His books, Graham Clarke's
"History of England", Graham
Clarke's "Grand Tour" and
"Joe Carpenter Son, An English Nativity", were published by Phaidon
Press. The latter, a verse play, now having been performed more than 300 times
in churches and schools worldwide. His 'discovery' of "W. Shakespeare
Gent. His Actuale Nottebooke" saw the publication of a quite different
work in 1992. This has been followed by "Engelskmann I Lofoten" a
Norwegian Sketchbook in 1996. Spring 2000 saw the publication of 'Bait Box
Stew', sketches and notes from his beloved "Cornwall", and "KENT", a collection of watercolours on his home territory. At a ceremony in
Canterbury Cathedral in July 1993, an Honorary Degree of Master of Arts
was conferred upon Graham Clarke
by the University of Kent and in August 1993 Graham was made a Chevalier de la
Confrerie du Ceps Ardechois in his favourite part of Southern France. Graham
was also named as the Fine Art Trade Guild Artist of the Year 1993. In 1999 he
was asked to become an official ambassador for the County
of Kent, a role which Graham Clarke pursues with much enthusiasm. A recent major project, Graham Clarke 's Millennium window is to be seen
in his own parish church
of Boughton Monchelsea, Kent.
It is unique in that it involves light and sound as well as the stained glass
itself. During the year 2000 he produced a large composite wood carving 'The
Gloucester Nativity'. Gloucester Cathedral is its home but it is designed to
travel and forms the centrepiece at Clarke's retrospective exhibition held at
The Royal Museum and Art Gallery, Canterbury in 2001. Graham Clarke
is a man with an overriding sense of tradition, and of religious, social and
historical continuities. He takes pride in his view of himself as a local man,
a "Man of Kent", with a firm faith in the peace and stability of
family, home and community. As such, life and art have always been
interdependent, mutually sustaining activities. His wife Wendy, his four
children, his animals and friends, the cottage industry he maintains in the village
of Boughton Monchelsea
where he lives, his comedy band, and the surrounding landscape, offer a
microcosm of the world and its history. The scenes he depicts represent both
for him and for his everwidening audience, an idyll and a universal ideal.