Our Artists
Maggi Hambling CBE (1945)
A very successful versatile, honest dynamic and bold artist committed to her subject. Arguably best known for her steel scallop shells installed on Aldeburgh beach.
Richard Hamilton (1922 - 2013)
Richard Hamilton was the founder of Pop art and a visionary who outlined its aims and ideals. A lollipop from one of his early collages furnished the movement with its title. His visual juxtapositions from the 1950s were the first to capture the frenetic energy of television, and remind us of how strange the vacuum, tape recorder, and radio must have seemed for the first generations that experienced them. "Pop Art" the British artist declared, would be: "Popular, transient, expendable, low-cost, mass-produced, young, witty, sexy, gimmicky, glamorous, and Big Business."
Angela Harding (tbc)
British birds and wild life have inspired Angela’s images since her student days, in particular her love of familiar garden birds, and also Sea birds found in Norfolk, Suffolk and Cornwall. Working mainly in lino/vinyl and silkscreen, she illustrates her passion for line, combining atmosphere, sense of place and strength of form.
Ian Hay RCA (1940)
Ian Hay is known for his exquisite paintings of London, Venice, Paris in addition to landscapes in and around his local town of Colchester. His impressionist style capturing the light and charm with subtle colours is held together with strong drawing
Mark Hearld (1974)
Hearld is fascinated by nature and its inhabitants. Foxes chickens, cattle and a array of plants and fauna regularly feature in his art works
Ronald Hellen
Ronald's colourful paintings are essentially about place and trying to capture the atmosphere peculiar to particular buildings, scenes or locations.
Stephen Henderson (1956)
Carved wooden sculptures of Birds and Fish usually found along the Essex Marshes nearby where he lives and works
Dame Barbara Hepworth (1903 - 1975)
Known as a leading sculptor of the 20th Century and leading 'St. Ives' artist. Her work exemplifies Modernism and one of the key figures in the development of abstraction.
Gertrude Hermes OBE RA (1901 - 1983)
Gertrude Hermes was a British wood-engraver and sculptor. Hermes was a member of the English Wood Engraving Society and exhibited with the Society of Wood Engravers, the Royal Academy and The London Group during the 1930s
Clive Hicks-Jenkins (1951)
Clive is a renown actor, director & stage designer who has succesfully turned his hand to painting, printmaking and illustration.
David Hockney RA RCA (1937)
David Hockney is without doubt the best known and most influentual painter, printmaker and photograph of his generation worldwide. Notorious for his large colourful paintings reflecting life in California, his amazing use of glorious colours and an amazing draughsman.
Iona Howard
Predomininatly a printmaker who works using the carborundum technique to capture the landscapes of Cornwall and more recently The Fens. Reflecting the flatness and ever changing light and colours.
Peter Howson OBE (1958)
is a Scottish painter. He was a British official war artist in 1993 during the Bosnian War
John Hoyland RA (1934 - 2011)
John Hoyland studied at Sheffield School of Art and the Royal Academy Schools. His work is represented in public collections including the Royal Academy of Arts, Tate and the Victoria & Albert Museum. He was elected to the Royal Academy in 1991.
Walter Hoyle ARCA (1922 - 2000)
Painter printmaker and illustrator who became known as one of the Bardfield Artists