Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. contemporaryartsociety.org › artists › norman-stevensNorman Stevens - CAS

    Biography. Norman Stevens ARA (b. Bradford, Yorkshire, UK 1937 - d. 1988) attended Bradford Art College alongside David Hockney, John Loker and David Oxtoby and then, went to the Royal College of Art, London in 1957 where he was awarded the Lloyd Landscape and Abbey Minor Travelling scholarships.

  2. The Redfern has continued to represent Stevens following his death in 1988, notably staging a memorial show in 1989, from which the RA and British Council purchased prints, and a tribute show in 2008, where his work was shown alongside new paintings by his friends from Bradford: Hockney, John Loker, David Oxtoby and Michael Vaughan.

  3. Biography. 1937. Born in Bradford. 1952-57. Studies at Bradford Regional College of Art alongside David Hockney, John Loker and David Oxtoby. 1957-61. Studied painting at the Royal College of Art, London. 1960. Wins the Lloyd Landscape Scholarship and the Abbey Minor Travelling Scholarship.

  4. Printmaker. Born: 17 June 1937 in Bradford, Yorkshire, England, United Kingdom. Died: 20 August 1988. Nationality: British. Elected ARA: 18 May 1983. Gender: Male. Preferred media: Printmaking, Etching, and Painting.

    • norman stevens biography death1
    • norman stevens biography death2
    • norman stevens biography death3
    • norman stevens biography death4
    • norman stevens biography death5
  5. Norman Stevens died in Bradford, England on 20 August 1988. His work is in collections including The Arts Council, Bradford Museums and Galleries, The Tate, The V&A, the Museum of Modern Art in New York, and the Musée d’Art et d’Histoire in Geneva.

  6. Stevens was elected a Royal Academician in 1987 but died the following year. His work was exhibited in spring 2015 at the Royal Academy. Flowers from Madeira

  7. Norman Stevens died in Bradford, England on 20 August 1988. His work is in collections including The Arts Council, Bradford Museums and Galleries, The Tate, The V&A, the Museum of Modern Art in New York, and the Musée d’Art et d’Histoire in Geneva.

  1. People also search for