Robin Richmond
RWS
Born1951
Philadelphia USA
EducationSt George’s English School, Rome.
Alma materChelsea School of Art
Known forPainting, Writing about art, Illustration, Teaching
Spouse(s)Prof. James A. Hampton, Cognitive Scientist
Children
  • Adam Hampton (b.1977)
  • Max Richmond Hampton
  • (b.1981, d.1981)
  • Saskia Hampton (b.1982)

Robin Richmond RWS is a London-based British-American painter, writer, critic, teacher and illustrator, regularly exhibiting her art in the UK and France.[1] She is the author of five books on art and has illustrated three children's books. She is a leading colourist and painter of abstract landscapes. She was elected a Fellow of the Royal Watercolour Society in 2022. She is the author of an art blog.[2]

Career

[edit]

Born Nov 7, 1951 in Philadelphia, USA, Richmond grew up in Rome, before moving to London in 1969. Her early work is very figurative and based on direct observation.[1]

After graduating from Chelsea School of Art with a BA (Fine Art) in 1974, where she studied with Ken Kiff, Prunella Clough, Gillian Ayres, and others, Richmond took an MA in Art History at Chelsea with Nicholas Wadley. She had her first one-woman show of paintings at the Ben Uri Gallery, London in 1976.[3] Since then, she has exhibited regularly in London, New York, and at regional galleries in France, the US, and the UK. She held the post of visiting professor in art at the University of California, Santa Cruz (1985),[4] and at Yale University (2002).[5] Since 1976 she has exhibited regularly in London's West End in particular at the Mercury Gallery,[6] and the Curwen Gallery[7]

In 2021 she was elected a Fellow of the Royal Watercolour Society.[8][9]

Awards and Honours

[edit]

Books

[edit]

Selected Art Criticism by Robin Richmond

[edit]

Selected solo exhibitions

[edit]

Selected Group Exhibitions[24][25][26]

[edit]

Richmond has contributed to regular group exhibitions, 1989–2024 at the Royal Watercolour Society, Bankside Gallery and Whitcomb Street Gallery, London; 1989–2016 at the Curwen and New Academy Gallery, London; and 1988–1993 at the Mercury Gallery, London.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b Richmond, Robin A. (March 3, 2016). Living Landscape. London: Curwen Gallery and the White Stork Press. pp. 4–18. ISBN 978-0-9552060-1-6.
  2. ^ "Robin Richmond - Blog".
  3. ^ "Ben Uri collection - past exhibitions". Ben Uri Collection.
  4. ^ "Robin Richmond RWS - Biography". Bankside Gallery.
  5. ^ a b "Robin Richmond 'On Solitary Fields'". Cassone Art.
  6. ^ "Contemporary Art Society".
  7. ^ "Contemporary Art Society".
  8. ^ "Our Members". Royal Watercolour Society.
  9. ^ "Royal Watercolour Society - Robin Richmond".
  10. ^ Kellaway, Kate (15 April 2006). "The attraction of Opposite". The Observer.
  11. ^ "The Storm Tree". City, University of London.
  12. ^ Barnet-Sánchez, Holly (1997). "Frida Kahlo: Her Life and Art Revisited". Latin American Research Review. 32 (3): 243–257. doi:10.1017/S0023879100038152.
  13. ^ "INTRODUCING MICHELANGELO". Kirkus Reviews.
  14. ^ "Exhibition - Mineral Histories / Robin Richmond". Coningsby Gallery.
  15. ^ "Hesperides". Artsy.
  16. ^ "Robin Richmond, citoyenne du monde". Le Populaire du Centre. 11 July 2018.
  17. ^ "Association Culturelle Excit'oeil".
  18. ^ "Art Rabbit - Living Landscape".
  19. ^ "Curwen Gallery - galleries.co.uk".
  20. ^ "Association Culturelle Excit'oeil".
  21. ^ Freeman, Julian (22 March 2012). "'The Still Point of the Turning World: New paintings by Robin Richmond'". British Art Journal. 13 (1): 92–94.
  22. ^ "Larry Poons at Jacobson Howard Gallery, Robin Richmond at Paul Sharpe Contemporary Art, Eric Holzman at Jason McCoy Gallery". artcritical. 22 April 2004.
  23. ^ "Sacred Geographies Paul Sharpe Contemporary Art New York" (in Italian).
  24. ^ "Gallery East".
  25. ^ "Gallery Different".
  26. ^ "Little Buckland Gallery".