Screen print on paper
image: 560 x 835 mm frame: 570 x 850 x 25 mm
Patrick Caulfield studied at the Chelsea School of Art in the late 1950's, and at the Royal College of Art from 1960 to 1963, where his fellow pupils included David Hockney and R.B. Kitaj. After he left, he returned to Chelsea as a teacher.
image: 560 x 835 mm frame: 570 x 850 x 25 mm
Patrick Caulfield studied at the Chelsea School of Art in the late 1950's, and at the Royal College of Art from 1960 to 1963, where his fellow pupils included David Hockney and R.B. Kitaj. After he left, he returned to Chelsea as a teacher.
Walking through London has been described as both "pleasurable and painful". The seductive windows of old wine merchants and the distinct outlines of gallery's, proved London's structure could not be measured by geography alone.
London's street scape is now littered with anti-seating, anti-skating, and anti everything...."surfaces powerfully defined not by what they are for but what they are against"
The Thames its self has become one of London's greatest barriers, dividing the city into its prejudices and social divisions.
This city is by no means a boring one, its juxtaposed buildings and intriguing walkways some how connect together but can we not involve the river more?
London's street scape is now littered with anti-seating, anti-skating, and anti everything...."surfaces powerfully defined not by what they are for but what they are against"
The Thames its self has become one of London's greatest barriers, dividing the city into its prejudices and social divisions.
This city is by no means a boring one, its juxtaposed buildings and intriguing walkways some how connect together but can we not involve the river more?