Norman Ackroyd

Norman Ackroyd, CBE, RA (born 26 March 1938)[1] is an English artist known primarily for his aquatint work. He lives and is based in Bermondsey, London.[2]

Norman Ackroyd
Born (1938-03-26) 26 March 1938
Leeds, England, UK
NationalityBritish
OccupationArtist
Known forEtching, Printing
Websitewww.normanackroyd.com

Background

Ackroyd was born on 26 March 1938 in Leeds, Yorkshire. He attended Leeds College of Art from 1957 to 1961 and the Royal College of Art, London from 1961 to 1964,[2] where he studied under Julian Trevelyan. Subsequently, he lived for several years in the United States. He was elected to the Royal Academy of Art in 1988[2] and appointed Professor of Etching, University of the Arts, in 1994. He was elected Senior Fellow of the Royal College of Art in 2000, and in 2007 was made CBE for services to Engraving and Printing.

His daughter Poppy Ackroyd is a composer and musician.

His son Simeon Ackroyd is an artist.

Work

In the 1980s Ackroyd emerged as a landscape artist. Central Saint Martins College of Art and Design mounted a retrospective exhibition of these works in 2006 and kept an archive of his work. His works range from minimalist, nearly abstract impressions, to detailed images. His work almost never includes the human figure, the landscape subjects are often of old human habitation. His prints range from tiny etchings intended to be bound into books to huge etchings. His preferred medium for working directly on paper is watercolour, including a recent project pairing his watercolors with poems by Kevin Crossley-Holland, published under the title Moored Man.[3] He has also designed a number of large-scale, etched reliefs in steel or bronze commissioned for architectural projects in London, Moscow, Birmingham, and Glasgow. Recently completed projects include a mural at the Sainsbury Laboratory Cambridge University, showing scenes from the Galapagos, and a door at Great Portland Estates in London, W1. See also published works such as The Stratton Street Series (introduction by Ian Ritchie).[4]

With Douglas Dunn, he has recently published A Line in the Water;[5] the book was designed by Isambard Thomas. Ackroyd's working methods are described in an issue of Archipelago (No. III, Spring 2009).

Ackroyd's work can be found in several British and American galleries including the Zillah Bell Gallery (which holds the largest collection of his work in the North of England), the Tate, the British Museum, and the National Gallery of Art, Washington. He has been in several television programmes, including BBC documentaries in 1980, 2006, and What Do Artists Do All Day? (2013).[6]

gollark: Hmm... it appears that isso is *too smart* regarding selectors, which makes it *too stupid*.
gollark: There are many, many dynamic services though (skynet, fortunes, dwarf fortress HTTP output, that other thing).
gollark: It's hosted via nginx and compiled via static site generator.
gollark: Well, the best I can do regarding bodging isso to handle the infipages correctly would probably be to somehow redo the URLs as `/infipage/100`.
gollark: Yes...

References

  1. "Birthdays", The Guardian, p. 37, 26 March 2014
  2. Royal Academy page. Retrieved January 2013
  3. Ackroyd, Norman; Crossley-Holland, Kevin (2006). Moored Man: Poems of North Norfolk. London: Enitharmon Editions. p. 63. ISBN 9781904634522.
  4. Ackroyd, Norman (2003). The Stratton Street series. Herne Bay: Categorical Books. pp. 88pp. ISBN 9781904662020.
  5. Ackroyd, Norman; Dunn, Douglas (2009). A Line in the Water. London: Royal Academy of Arts. p. 159. ISBN 9781903973684.
  6. "What Do Artists Do All Day?: Norman Ackroyd (episode 1 of 3)". BBC. 19 March 2013. Retrieved 23 March 2013.
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