Tye Green

Tye Green

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Reference

157879

John Arthur Malcolm Aldridge was born in Woolwich and educated at Uppingham and Corpus Christi, Oxford where he became a close friend of John Betjeman. Although he received no formal art training, but having painted from his early years, his innate talent was quickly evident, and by 1931 he had been invited by Ben Nicholson to exhibit with the pioneering Seven & Five Society. He held his first one-man exhibition at the Leicester Galleries in 1933 and exhibited at the Venice Biennale in 1934. At this time he settled in Great Bardfield, Essex, a village that was to be home to an artistic community that included his great friend Edward Bawden as well as John Nash, Kenneth Rountree, Michael Rothenstein, Cedric Morris and others. At Great Bardfield he took pleasure in painting the Essex countryside and above all the garden and grounds he was developing at his home, Place House. The present work shows the garden at Place House and was exhibited in London in 1950 at the Art Council’s major exhibition of Contemporary British Landscape Artists alongside other major contemporary landscape paintings by Sutherland, Nicholson, Nash and others. Aldridge served in the army during World War II, 1941-45. In 1949 he was invited by William Coldstream to become a painting tutor at the Slade where he remained until 1970. An excellent portrait painter, his portrait of his close friend Robert Graves is in the collection of the National Portrait Gallery. The Tate Gallery, Victoria & Albert Museum and many other public collections hold examples of his work. Tye Green is close to Braintree in Essex and not far from the artist’s home in Great Bardfield. The present work was reproduced by the Post Office as a poster to encourage the correct use of the post code.

Dimensions:

Height 127 cm / 50 "
Width 193.04 cm / 76 "

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