Brenda Chamberlain (artist)
Brenda Chamberlain (17 March 1912–11 July 1971) was a Welsh artist and poet.
Early life and education
Brenda Irene Chamberlain was born in Bangor, Gwynedd, the daughter of Francis Thomas Chamberlain and Elsie Cooil Chamberlain. Her father worked for the railroad. Her mother served a term on the Bangor Borough Council, and was later Mayor of Bangor during World War II.[1] She studied art at the Royal Academy in London.[2]
Career
Before the Second World War, she moved in with artist John Petts; they married in 1935, and divorced in 1944. During their time together, they lived in a cottage at Llanllechid ran the Caseg Press from their home. Chamberlain made woodcuts and broadsheets for the press.[3] The cottage they shared, Tyn-y-mynydd, now bears a plaque recalling their work there.[4][5]
Chamberlain also produced prose works, including a novel (The Water Castle, 1964) and a memoir of life at Carreg, Bardsey Island, where she lived and worked from 1947 until 1962.[6]
Chamberlain won the first two Gold Medals awarded by the National Eisteddfod of Wales for Fine Art, in 1951 and 1953.[7]
Later life
In 1961 she went to live on the Greek island of Hydra, but returned to Wales in 1967. She died in 1971, age 59, in Bangor, after an overdose of sedatives. Her remains were interred at Glanadda Cemetery, Ffordd Caernarfon.[2]
Art by Brenda Chamberlain is in the collections of National Museum Wales, National Library of Wales, Bangor University, Cyfarthfa Castle, and Royal Holloway, University of London.[8]
There is a collection of her papers, including sketches, letters, poems, photographs, diaries, and unpublished works, at the National Library of Wales.[9]
Kate Holman published an academic biography of Brenda Chamberlain in 1997.[10] Curator Jill Piercy published another biography of Brenda Chamberlain in 2013.[1]
Works
- The Green Heart (1958)
- Tide-Race (1962)
- The Water Castle (1964)
- A Rope of Vines (1965)
- Alun Lewis and the Making of the Caseg Broadsheets (1969)
- Poems with Drawings (1969)
References
- 1 2 Jill Piercy, Brenda Chamberlain: Artist and Writer (Parthian Books 2013). ISBN 9781906998233
- 1 2 "Brenda Chamberlain" Wales Arts, BBC Cymru Wales.
- ↑ Alison Smith, John Petts and the Caseg Press (Ashgate 1999). ISBN 9780754600343
- ↑ SH6268 : Ty'r mynydd, Mountain Street, Rachub, Geograph.org.uk
- ↑ "Brenda Chamberlain, 1912-1971" Literature Wales, Writers' Plaques.
- ↑ "Brenda Chamberlain and Bardsey Island", Bardsey Island Trust.
- ↑ Gold Medal for Fine Art, The National Eisteddfod of Wales. Retrieved 24 October 2014.
- ↑ ArtUK.org, Brenda Chamberlain.
- ↑ Brenda Chamberlain MSS, National Library of Wales.
- ↑ Kate Holman, Brenda Chamberlain (University of Chicago Press 1997). ISBN 9780708310489
External links
- A self-portrait by Brenda Chamberlain, from the collection of National Museum Wales
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