Geoffrey Key

Geoffrey Key (born 1941, Rusholme, Manchester, England) is a British painter and sculptor. A number of public art collections have examples of his work.[1]

Early life and education

Key's mother, Marion, worked as an illustrator, and encouraged him to draw.[2]:3–4[3]

Key was educated at Manchester's High School of Art, whose headmaster, Ernest Goodman, established the Salford Art Club. After Goodman's death, its members chose Geoffrey Key as Honorary President.[4]

In 1958 he enrolled at the Manchester Regional College of Art.[2]:11 At the college Key was tutored by the sculptor Ted Roocroft and the painter Harry Rutherford.

After gaining the National Diploma of Design and the Diploma of Associateship of Manchester, the latter with distinction, Key took up a postgraduate scholarship in sculpture. His academic awards include the Heywood Medal in Fine Art and the Guthrie Bond Travelling Scholarship.[2]

Career

Office Workers by Geoffrey Key

Geoffrey Key’s early work included an important period of development during which he concentrated on painting and drawing a specific area of the Derbyshire landscape, the Whiteley Nab hill, south of Glossop. Many hundreds of images were created of this one landscape. Key was later to reveal that the sole purpose of this dedicated period of study, was to build upon the firm foundation established by his academic training, whilst divesting himself of the influences he had absorbed in order to arrive at his own personal artistic language.[2]:13 It was around this time that he also held a position as an art teacher at Broughton High Secondary School in Salford, although he would later relinquish this post as his reputation grew and the likes of Salford Art Gallery, The Rutherston Loan Collection and North West Arts began to acquire his work.[2]:33

Key was elected to membership of the Manchester Academy of Fine Arts in 1968 and was a prize winner in 1971.[2]:36 During this time he was also commissioned by three North West England based companies – Mather & Platt, Richard Johnson & Nephew, and Wilson’s Brewery. The Richard Johnson & Nephew pictures are now held by the Museum of Science and Industry, Manchester (MOSI).[2]:38 Of the Manchester Academy Exhibition in 1979, Jane Clifford writing in the Telegraph commented "Perhaps the artist that stands out most is Geoffrey Key" "His female forms show a self confidence which is compelling".[5]

In the 1980s the French company Société des Caves de Roquefort also commissioned work.[2]:38 Further successful exhibitions were held in both the UK and abroad. In 1987 the Manchester Evening News asked Key to write an article on L. S. Lowry, who Key had known well, for a feature marking the centenary of the artist's birth. This article was accompanied by a contemporary drawing of Lowry by Key.[2]:22

In the early 1990s Key visited Hong Kong to exhibit his work in a gallery at the Mandarin Oriental Hotel.[2]:185 Key has stated that this, his first visit to Asia, was to prove a catalyst in a change in the use of colour in his work. An earlier predominance of muted tones was replaced with a fuller and more vibrant palate, which has remained an enduring aspect of his art. Of the exhibition, Asian Art News said "It is the emotion and pleasure of making art that comes through so clearly in Key's work and makes it sparkle".[3]

Pennine Canal by Geoffrey Key

Key’s career as an artist now spans five decades and his work and exhibitions have been widely appraised and reviewed.[6] His paintings and sculpture feature in several public art collections in the northwest of England, including Salford and Manchester Art Galleries.[1] His work is also held in private and corporate collections including National Westminster Bank, Mandarin Oriental Hong Kong, Jockey Club of Hong Kong, Chateau de St Ouen and Perrier. He has represented the UK in invited exhibitions in Europe.[7] Shows have taken place across the UK, Europe, Asia, Australia and the USA [8] and his work is exhibited and sold in galleries in the UK, Ireland, the US and Hong Kong.[9][10]

In May 2013 Key's work was exhibited at Messum's Art Gallery in Cork Street, London.[11] Decscribed as one of the most important living painters, prices for Key's work have risen steadily over the last decade.[12]

Key has also published a number of books.[13] G Key - A Book of Drawings and Interview (1975), Daydreams (1981), Clowns (2001), Geoffrey Key Twentieth Century Drawings (2002), Images (2004), Geoffrey Key Paintings (2008), Birds (2010). Signature Book (2011).[14]

In 2011 Key was filmed for a documentary about his work and life by Andy Pacino, a filmmaker and author from Manchester. It has the working title Saltglaze Pot.[15]

Speaking with the Manchester Evening News in October 2009 Key said of his style and manner of working "If I'm doing a still life. I'll set it up, look at it for an hour or so, put it away and then paint it. I find the mind's great at distilling, at breaking it down into essentials. If I'm looking at it I find myself copying every detail, and that isn't necessary. I couldn't sit in a field painting a landscape because I would just feel I'm copying nature when photography can do a better job. Painting it from memory, recreating in on canvas can do quite another job".[5]

References

  1. 1 2 "Geoffrey Key (b.1941) | Art UK Art UK | Discover Artists Geoffrey Key (b.1941)". Bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 2016-09-15.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 O'Leary, Judith M (2011). G Key. JMOL Publishing. ISBN 978-0-9559117-4-3.
  3. 1 2
  4. Salford Art Club - Salford City Councilwww.salford.gov.uk › ... › Salford Museum › About us › Links
  5. 1 2
  6. Geoffrey Key. "Exhibitions". Geoffrey Key. Retrieved 2016-09-15.
  7. "Geoffrey Key". Platform505. Retrieved 2016-09-15.
  8. "The Bigger Picture". En Magazine. September 3, 2009. Retrieved December 21, 2014.
  9. Geoffrey Key. "Publications". Geoffrey Key. Retrieved 2016-09-15.

Other news coverage

External links

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