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Gwenda Morgan

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Nationality
  
British

Name
  
Gwenda Morgan

Known for
  

Gwenda Morgan Sybil Andrews and Gwenda Morgan A Tale of Two Artists National

Born
  
1st February 1908

Died
  
1991, Petworth, United Kingdom

Education
  
Goldsmiths, University of London, Grosvenor School of Modern Art

Gwenda Morgan (1 February 1908 – 1991) was a British wood engraver. She lived in town of Petworth, West Sussex.

Contents

Gwenda Morgan East Dean Morgan Gwenda VA Search the Collections

Early life

Gwenda Morgan By the River Morgan Gwenda VA Search the Collections

Morgan was born in Petworth, her father having moved there to work at the ironmongers Austens, of which he later became the proprietor. He was the son of military farrier who was born in Wales.

Gwenda Morgan 873 best Prints images on Pinterest Block prints Lino cuts and

Following school in Petworth and at Brighton and Hove High School, Morgan studied at Goldsmiths' College of Art in London, from 1926. From 1930 she attended the Grosvenor School of Modern Art in Pimlico where she was taught and strongly influenced by the principal, Iain Macnab.

Gwenda Morgan Gwenda Morgan 1 Bald beautiful and ballsy bint gets on her bike

The Grosvenor School was a progressive art school, and the championing of wood engraving and linocuts fitted with its democratic approach to the arts.

Work

Gwenda Morgan Gwenda Morgan

Morgan was commissioned to illustrate a number of books published by private presses. For the Samson Press she produced the frontispiece for Duke Hamilton's Wager in 1934 and Pictures and Rhymes in 1936. She illustrated four books for the Golden Cockerel Press, including Gray's Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard (1946) and Grimms' Other Tales (1956).

Gwenda Morgan Wednesdays woman wood engraver Bald beautiful and ballsy bint

The main body of her work drew upon the landscape and buildings around Petworth and the neighbouring South Downs. Her work was inspired by that of Macnab, Percy Douglas Bliss and the Sussex-bred Eric Ravilious.

Throughout the Second World War she worked as a Land Girl just outside Petworth. Her record of those years was published by the Whittington Press in 2002 as The Diary of a Land Girl, 1939-1945.

She was a Fellow of the Royal Society of Painter-Etchers & Engravers, an Honorary Member of the Society of Wood Engravers, and a Member of the National Society of Painters, Sculptors and Engravers, and she showed work at their annual exhibitions. She also exhibited at the Royal Academy and at the Redfern Gallery.

Her prints are held in the collections of the Victoria and Albert Museum and the British Museum in London, the Ashmolean Museum in Oxford, and the Fitzwilliam Museum in Cambridge, among others.

In 2015 an exhibition, "A Study in Contrast: Sybil Andrews and Gwenda Morgan", was held at the Art Gallery of Greater Victoria in Victoria, British Columbia, Canada, comparing and contrasting the fellow Grosvenor School artists.

Some of her prints are on permanent display in the Leconfield Hall, Petworth, to which Morgan gave a substantial bequest on her death. Original wood engravings by Morgan are being sold in aid of the Leconfield Hall by the Kevis House Gallery in Petworth.

References

Gwenda Morgan Wikipedia