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Alistair Grant (British, 1925-1997)


Alistair Grant was perhaps best known as a printmaker. He taught for a number of years in the printmaking department at the Royal College of Art, where he was to become Professor. Over the years he taught printmaking to many who were to become leading UK artists. Grant was at the top of his profession and a groundbreaker in his explorations of mixed media techniques.

In addition, Grant was also a wonderful painter. In the early 1980s his imagery had turned to an open expressionist style, with sweeping brushmarks and the introduction of new vibrant colour. Inspired by the Normandy coastline around Etaples and Le Touquet Grant would create cyphers from the shapes and forms in the landscape, which he would offset against curtains of colour. They evoke bright or misty days, blazing skies or sunsets, beaches or harbours. The paintings and prints are descriptions of places he loved and constantly returned to. One could describe him as a French reflection of the St. Ives School where painters explored the landscape in similar fashion, as they still do.


Alistair Grant. Fete Champetre


Fête Champêtre
screenprint and lithograph in colours
on RCA Centenary year watermarked wove paper
1996
signed and numbered 2/100 by the artist in pencil
56.5 x 76.5 cm.
the full sheet, printed in colours to the edges

£400

printed and published by The Royal College of Art, London.
Example in the Government Art Collection and British Council.

Alistair Grant. Untitled. Ville de Dieppe


Untitled (Ville de Dieppe)
screenprint and lithograph in colours on wove paper
signed and numbered 28/30 by the artist in pencil
56.5 x 77.5 cm.
the full sheet, printed in colours to the edges

SOLD

Alistair Grant. The Bridge at Etaples


The Bridge at Etaples
silkscreen/lithograph in colours
signed and numbered 18/48 by the artist in pencil
31 x 31 cm.
the full sheet, printed in colours to the edges

SOLD

Published by The Royal College of Art in 1987 in an edition of 48.

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