I
am delighted to announce that The Club will be holding its first annual
event on Monday 12th October. This special day will be held at the beautiful
venue of Nature in Art, Twigworth, just north of Gloucester. This is
a unique museum and art gallery dedicated to all forms of art inspired
by nature. The event will start at 9.30am and continue until about 5.00pm
with talks scheduled by Myles Archibald, Stefan Buczacki, Sam Berry,
Peter Marren, Robert Gillmor and George Peterken. There will also be
a selection of natural history book sellers attending the event with
opportunities to browse the stands throughout the day.
The
focus of the event will be the launch of Peter Marren and Robert Gillmors
eagerly anticipated book The Art of the New Naturalists and both authors
will be signing copies at the event. There will also be a buffet lunch
as well as a specially produced brochure and limited edition mug. Tickets
will be £35 each and strictly limited to 100. If you would like
to attend, please contact me as soon as possible to reserve your ticket.
The event will also mark the start of Robert Gillmors post as
artist in residence, where there is the unique opportunity of seeing
Robert at work in the studio. There will be an exhibition of his work
including NN material. The Club is also organising a special exhibition
of original New Naturalist artwork by Clifford and Rosemary Ellis and
Robert Gillmor at Nature in Art during March 2010.
More
details to follow later in the year.
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So
you've completed your New Nat collection;
what next?
Ken Davies
New
Naturalist No.105 - Wye Valley
By George Peterken
Peter Marren
_____________________________________

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It
was the weekend of the local village fete and everyone was busy preparing
for this important community event. I had arranged to spend an afternoon
with Robert Gillmor and while we chatted for several hours in his comfortable
studio, I was aware that Robert's wife Sue, herself an accomplished pastel
and oil painter, was busy in the next room, preparing a wonderful treasure
hunt game for the following day.
I have long admired Robert's work. I'm not at all sure when or how I first
became aware of his distinctive style, but his beautifully crafted pen
and ink drawings, watercolour paintings and his stylish linocuts were
always a great inspiration while I studied illustration and later graphic
design at the University of the West of England. It has been a great honour
to get to know Robert a little over the years and it was a pleasure to
spend a few hours with him at his home on the north Norfolk coast.
Robert was born and educated in Reading and was greatly influenced by
his grandfather, Allen Seaby, who was Professor of Fine Art at Reading
University. Robert spent a great deal of time watching him in his studio,
carefully printing his colour woodcuts. This was also Robert's first introduction
to the New Naturalist books as his grandfather had a painting of Blackcock
Lekking featured in the second volume of the series, British Game. With
a strong interest in birds and drawing, Robert spent a good deal of time
bird-watching and studying bird behaviour in the various flooded gravel
pits around Reading. He was an active member of the Reading Ornithological
Club and, in 1949 while still a young schoolboy, illustrated the first
cover of their Annual Report and has continued to design these ever since,
(although now it is the annual Berkshire Bird Report). Robert's first
commercial use of linocuts was in 1958 for the cover of David Snow's book,
A Study of Blackbirds, for which he had done the line drawings. Around
this time he became involved with annual RSPB film shows, brought to Reading
by Frank Hamilton, a member of the Society's tiny staff. Frank saw and
admired Robert's early artwork and this lead to occasional line drawings
for society publications and covers for the film programmes, which in
turn led to covers for Birds Magazine and eventually Christmas cards.
He also helped re-design the RSPB's Avocet logo.
Robert also got to know the writer and broadcaster Tony Soper, whom he
met in Reading whilst filming for the BBC television series 'Out of Doors'.
Drawings were soon commissioned from the BBC and also for Tony Soper's
Bird Table Book which was first published in 1965. This book became hugely
popular and has gone through various editions. The striking original jacket
design featured a Great Tit and a Great Spotted Woodpecker using a four
colour linocut.
In the late fifties, with the support of leading bird artists of the day
such as Peter Scott, he organised 'Exhibition by Contemporary Bird Painters',
which led directly to the founding of the Society of Wildlife Artists
in 1964. Having spent six years teaching art at Leighton Park in Reading,
Robert retired from teaching in 1965 when he found himself doing two full-time
jobs. He was also becoming more involved with The Society of Wildlife
Artists, of which he was the first secretary. In 1966 Robert became the
art editor of the prestigious publication Birds of the Western Palearctic.
He continued to illustrate over 100 books as well as work for the RSPB,
BTO and his local wildlife trust. Eventually he returned to his great
love for printmaking when he and Sue moved to the north Norfolk coast
in 1998. Although Robert is one of Britain's leading ornithological illustrators,
he now spends nearly all his creative time printmaking with the occasional
watercolour for a Poyser jacket and pen and ink drawings for the local
bird reports.
Robert had long admired the work of Clifford and Rosemary Ellis, especially
through their jacket designs for the New Naturalist books. In 1985 he
was approached by Crispin Fisher, who was the Natural History Editor at
Collins, to design the dust jackets for the New Naturalist series. Clifford
Ellis had died earlier that year, aged 78 and his widow Rosemary felt
that she could no longer carry on with the series. The remarkable team
of Clifford and Rosemary Ellis had designed more than 86 covers over a
period of 40 years, giving the series its distinctive branding. Crispin
Fisher was quite adamant that he wanted Robert to take over the mantle
of the Ellises and although Robert was very cautious about following in
the footsteps of such eminent artists, he eventually accepted the commission.
Crispin and Robert both agreed that it was important to retain the basic
layout and use of four flat colours and his first NN jacket design was
for Warblers. At that time Robert had not resumed his linocutting and
this design was made up of black drawings for each of the four colours,
using overlaps to create extra colours. The following jackets were designed
in the same way until Robert and Sue moved to Norfolk and the design for
The Broads, published in 2001, used a linocut for the first time. Since
volume 95, Northumberland, all the jacket designs have been full linocuts
often involving six or seven blocks and up to twenty colours. The entire
process is carried out by hand using his wonderful 1860 Albion Press.
Robert is now working on his 39th New Naturalist jacket and I was very
honoured to have a sneak preview of the design for Southern England, volume
108 in the series. With an average of four titles a year being published,
Robert is always working on one of these iconic jacket designs. In the
case of the jacket for Southern England, Robert visited an impressive
section of sea cliffs in north Norfolk and from his field sketches, worked
out a powerful design showing striking sedimentation, which will work
well both as a jacket design and linocut in its own right, and yet also
sit well with the rest of the New Naturalist series.
Robert is tremendously unassuming and not the least bit pretentious. His
work is up there with the best of our wildlife artists such as Charles
Tunnicliffe and Eric Ennion. He has brought his own distinctive style
and craft of printmaking to the New Naturalist series keeping them fresh
and exciting.
I met up with Robert and Sue the following day at the church fete. The
blustery showers which had been forecast failed to appear and the fete
was a tremendous success. I thoroughly enjoyed my visit to Norfolk and
felt greatly honoured to have spent a little more time with one of my
favourite working artists.
Tim
Bernhard
July 2008
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