Meny
Gratis kunstkonsultasjon
PreviewPreview Bestill trykk Bestill trykkKjøp digitalt bilde Kjøp digitalt bilde SendSend
Vis detaljerVis detaljer Legg til i favoritter Legg til i favoritter Last ned bildetLast ned bildet Liknende objekterLiknende objekter RøntgenundersøkelseRøntgenundersøkelse LysbildefremvisningLysbildefremvisning

Boy on Stool

  • Dimensjoner91.0 x 59.0 cm

Utforsk kunstnerens kraftfulle verk av Joan Eardley (1921–1963), kjent for sine følelsesladde portretter av Glasgow-barn og imponerende skotske landskap. Oppdag hennes unike blanding av realism og ekspresjonisme!

Håndlaget oljereproduksjon

Håndmalt olje på lerret i din valgte størrelse og ramme, laget på bestilling av våre kunstnere.

Standard
custom
CM
INCH

Velg mellom våre forhåndsdefinerte størrelser som bevarer kunstverkets opprinnelige proporsjoner.

bredde
høyde

Du kan angi egne mål for å tilpasse en spesifikk ramme eller plass. Dersom den valgte størrelsen ikke samsvarer med originalbildets proporsjoner, vil vi enten beskjære kunstverket eller utvide maleriet med ytterligere håndmalte elementer. En digital mockup vil bli sendt til din godkjenning før produksjonen starter.
Vennligst merk at forhåndsvisningen på skjermen ikke gjenspeiler den faktiske beskjæringen eller utvidelsen. Kun mockuppen vil vise den endelige komposisjonen nøyaktig.
Selv om tilpassede størrelser er tilgjengelige, anbefaler vi å velge et mål fra den forhåndsdefinerte listen for å bevare de originale proporsjonene.

Eksempler på hva som kan endres: Erstatt ansikt med bilde av kunden; Legg til kjæledyr (f.eks. bytt ut katt med hund); Inkluder en skjult melding i bakgrunnen; Endre bakgrunnslandskap eller elementer.
Etter bestilling vil OriginalUniqueArt.com-teamet sende e-post til kunden for instruksjoner og sende et utkast (mockup) som forhåndsvisning.

Verdensomspennende levering () på 3–4 uker i stedet for standard 5 uker. (26 July). Ingen kompromisser med kvaliteten.

why_choose_icon
Gratis ekspressfrakt over hele verden
why_choose_icon
Lerretsduk av høykvalitets lin
why_choose_icon
Full forsikring under transport
why_choose_icon
Garanti for refusjon av toll og importavgifter
why_choose_icon
Garantert korrekt fargegjengivelse
why_choose_icon
60 dagers returrett (kun ved feil)
why_choose_icon
100% pengene tilbake-garanti
why_choose_icon
Rabatt ved flere kjøp

Totalpris for bestilling

-

reproduction

Boy on Stool

Teknikk for reproduksjon

Størrelse på reproduksjon

-

Endelig pris

-


Om kunstneren

Joan Eardley (1921–1963): A Voice of Resilience and Scottish Landscape

Joan Kathleen Harding Eardley, a name synonymous with the raw beauty of Scotland and the poignant realities of post-war life, remains one of Britain’s most compelling artists. Born in 1921 in Sussex to parents grappling with the lingering shadows of the First World War – her father suffering from shell shock – Eardley's early years were marked by a sense of instability that perhaps fostered within her a deep empathy for those living on the fringes of society. This sensitivity would become a defining characteristic of her artistic vision.

Early Life and Artistic Beginnings

Joan Eardley was born at Bailing Hill Farm in Warnham, Sussex, where her parents were dairy farmers. Her mother, Irene Helen Morrison, (1891–1991), was Scottish and had met Captain William Edwin Eardley, (1887–1929), during World War One when he was stationed in Glasgow. Later in the war he fought in the trenches on the Western Front, was wounded in a gas attack and suffered shell-shock. The couple married at the end of the war, but Captain Eardley experienced episodes of depression and suffered a mental breakdown during Joan’s early childhood.

After the failure, and subsequent sale, of his farm in 1926, Captain Eardley worked for the Ministry of Agriculture and Joan's mother took her and her younger sister, Pat, (1922–2013), to live with her own mother in Blackheath, London. In 1929 Captain Eardley died by suicide, although the details of his death were not explained to Joan and Pat until they were in their teens, years later.

Joan’s artistic talent was recognised early on at St Helen's School where she trained. She went on to study at Hospitalfield House's post graduate art school in Arbroath in 1947, run by James Cowie. The two did not always see eye to eye, although she acknowledged in a letter to her mother that she was learning a great deal from him.

Influences and Artistic Style

Eardley’s artistic journey was one of constant evolution, shaped by diverse influences and a restless spirit. The Scottish Colourists – Samuel John Peploe and Francis Cadell – provided an early foundation for her artistic development. Their vibrant palette and expressive brushwork instilled in her a desire to capture emotion directly on canvas.

Her travels to Italy exposed her to the humanist ideals and sculptural qualities found in works by Giotto and Masaccio, impacting her portrayal of figures. She embraced bolder techniques, experimenting with impasto – applying paint thickly to create texture – and incorporating natural materials like sand and newspaper directly into her compositions.

Eardley’s style is characterized by a blend of realism and expressionism. She captured the essence of her subjects—whether children or landscapes—with an immediacy and emotional depth that transcended mere representation. Her later works show a move towards greater abstraction, but always grounded in observation.

Glasgow Street Children and Landscape Vision

In 1949 Eardley rented a studio at 21 Cochrane Street in Glasgow. There she made chalk drawings of the local tenement children, who became regular visitors to her studio. Many of these drawings were on scraps of sandpaper or loose sheets joined together by paperclips.

These drawings provided Eardley with imagery for many of her oil paintings, including *Street Kids*, 1949-51. She was never without a camera after moving to her nearby second studio at 204 St James Road and many of her photographs also provided subject matter for paintings. Her work was concurrent with childhood folklorists Peter and Iona Opie and the filmmaker James Ritchie who were recording children’s rhymes and customs at that time; Eardley was not alone in realising that this poverty stricken tenement life was a vanishing world.

Her fascination with the sea grew during her visits to Catterline, where she bought her own place in 1955. She painted on location, often during wild storms, using oil and boat paint mixed with newspaper, sand and grasses on hardboard, as captured in Audrey Walker’s photograph *Eardley painting facing the sea on the shore at Catterline*, 1950s.

Legacy and Enduring Influence

Tragically, Joan Eardley’s artistic career was cut short by breast cancer in 1963 at the age of just forty-two. Despite her relatively brief life, she left behind a substantial body of work that continues to resonate with audiences today. Her portraits of Glasgow street children are particularly valued for their unflinching portrayal of poverty and resilience, offering a powerful social commentary that remains relevant even now.

She is rightfully recognized as one of Scotland’s most important 20th-century artists, bridging the gap between realism and abstraction while capturing the spirit of her time with unparalleled sensitivity and skill. Her influence can be seen in subsequent generations of Scottish painters who have sought to explore themes of social justice and the beauty of the natural world.

Joan Kathleen Harding Eardley

Joan Kathleen Harding Eardley

1921 - 1963 , Storbritannia

Kort om kunstneren

  • Artistic Movement Or Style: Realisme og ekspresjonisme
  • Artists Or Movements Influenced By This Artist: ['Claude Monet']
  • Artists Who Influenced This Artist:
    • Samuel John Peploe
    • Francis Cadell
  • Date Of Birth: 18 mai 1921
  • Date Of Death: 16 aug 1963
  • Full Name: Joan Kathleen Harding Eardley
  • Nationality: Britisk
  • Notable Artworks:
    • Street Kids
    • The Wave
  • Place Of Birth: Warnham, Storbritannia