Suzanne Cooper: Street Scene, 1936-38

£180.00

In the 1930s, when she was still in her early twenties, Suzanne Cooper was one of the rising stars of British art. Her work has been overlooked for decades, but following a number of successful exhibitions in 2018 this forgotten figure of British Modernism is receiving the recognition due to her.

In 1935, when she was nineteen years old, she became a student at the Grosvenor School of Modern Art in London, where she was taught by the master print-makers Iain Macnab and Cyril Power. Over the next four years she exhibited her oil-paintings and wood-engravings to great acclaim in the press. Sadly her career was cut short by the outbreak of World War II. The Grosvenor School closed in 1939. She married Michael Franklin in 1940, had three children, and produced no more large-scale paintings, though continuinued to work in pastels and chalk. She died in 1992.

This is a limited edition giclée print printed on 300gsm Xpression textured archival paper. Edition size limited to 750 copies. Image size 36 × 43.2 cm, paper size 50 × 60 cm - Please note: If you are thinking of framing this print - please wait for the print to arrive before having the frame and mount made as slight variations in sizing can occur.

Retail price : £180 + carriage

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In the 1930s, when she was still in her early twenties, Suzanne Cooper was one of the rising stars of British art. Her work has been overlooked for decades, but following a number of successful exhibitions in 2018 this forgotten figure of British Modernism is receiving the recognition due to her.

In 1935, when she was nineteen years old, she became a student at the Grosvenor School of Modern Art in London, where she was taught by the master print-makers Iain Macnab and Cyril Power. Over the next four years she exhibited her oil-paintings and wood-engravings to great acclaim in the press. Sadly her career was cut short by the outbreak of World War II. The Grosvenor School closed in 1939. She married Michael Franklin in 1940, had three children, and produced no more large-scale paintings, though continuinued to work in pastels and chalk. She died in 1992.

This is a limited edition giclée print printed on 300gsm Xpression textured archival paper. Edition size limited to 750 copies. Image size 36 × 43.2 cm, paper size 50 × 60 cm - Please note: If you are thinking of framing this print - please wait for the print to arrive before having the frame and mount made as slight variations in sizing can occur.

Retail price : £180 + carriage

In the 1930s, when she was still in her early twenties, Suzanne Cooper was one of the rising stars of British art. Her work has been overlooked for decades, but following a number of successful exhibitions in 2018 this forgotten figure of British Modernism is receiving the recognition due to her.

In 1935, when she was nineteen years old, she became a student at the Grosvenor School of Modern Art in London, where she was taught by the master print-makers Iain Macnab and Cyril Power. Over the next four years she exhibited her oil-paintings and wood-engravings to great acclaim in the press. Sadly her career was cut short by the outbreak of World War II. The Grosvenor School closed in 1939. She married Michael Franklin in 1940, had three children, and produced no more large-scale paintings, though continuinued to work in pastels and chalk. She died in 1992.

This is a limited edition giclée print printed on 300gsm Xpression textured archival paper. Edition size limited to 750 copies. Image size 36 × 43.2 cm, paper size 50 × 60 cm - Please note: If you are thinking of framing this print - please wait for the print to arrive before having the frame and mount made as slight variations in sizing can occur.

Retail price : £180 + carriage