Cedric Morris ‘Group of Irises c. 1940’ Greetings Card

£2.50

This greetings card features the painting Group of Irises c. 1940 by Cedric Morris (1889-1982)

Cedric Morris (1889 – 1982) was the only person of his generation to achieve national stature both as a painter and a plantsman. As well as painting portraits, still-lifes and landscapes representing his expansive travels, Morris is best known for his flower paintings, which reveal his keen interest as a botanist – he cultivated over 90 new irises.

Gainsborough’s House holds the largest collection of artwork by Cedric Morris, generously gifted to the museum by the Trustees of the artist’s estate. A selection of his art are on permanent display within a dedicated room at Gainsborough’s House the National Centre of Thomas Gainsborough.

17 x 14cm

All purchases support Gainsborough’s House

 

 

Out of stock

Description

FSC Mix Paper from responsible sources
Compostable, Biodegradable clear bag

The artist-plantsman Sir Cedric Lockwood Morris (1889-1982) grew up in Sketty, South Wales. He spent his younger years intermittently abroad, regularly travelling across Europe and North Africa, whilst renting studios in Cornwall, Paris and London and becoming a conspicuous figure in the art world.

In the 1930s, Cedric and his partner, the artist Arthur Lett-Haines (‘Lett’), made South Suffolk their permanent base, founding the bohemian East Anglian School of Painting and Drawing. More of an artistic community than a school, it encouraged individuality and painting en plein air. Two of its most notable alumni are Lucian Freud (1922-2011) and Maggi Hambling (b. 1945).

Throughout his career Cedric painted portraits, landscapes, still life’s, and flower and animal studies in equal measure. He painted in a very direct and idiosyncratic way, using bold impasto colour. Today he is perhaps best known for his flower paintings, particularly of irises. Cedric was principally a painter, but also an avid and experimental plantsman. He was a noted iris breeder and each winter would travel to places such as Portugal and Turkey to paint and find plant species that he would then establish in the garden at Benton End.

Menu