Christopher John Ellis Fiddes (born Northampton 13 November 1934) is an English artist, muralist, designer of stained glass and book illustrator. He is also an expert art historian. He has enjoyed a long career as an artist, with prodigious output and driven by a strong belief in the value of traditional drawing and painting techniques that he feels have been largely lost in Post-Modern art movements and the 21st-century commercial art world.
Education and teaching career
editFiddes studied art at Northampton Art School from 1950 to 1954 and then gained an Art Teacher's Diploma at Leicester University. He did two years' National Service in the Northamptonshire Regiment of the British Army and spent time in Hong Kong. In 1957 he started teaching art at a Catholic boys' secondary school and then, in 1972, he became Head of Art at Northampton High School.
Historic preservation
editIn 1962 he co-founded the Northampton Civic Society with the historian Sir Gyles Isham and local architects and archivists, with the aim of preserving historic buildings from redevelopment. In 1965 he bought a listed house in the village of Cogenhoe and over the next 10 years restored it. His occupation of that house, which is now a listed building, is celebrated with a plaque.[1]
Paintings and illustrations
editMost of Fiddes' prolific output is driven by his compulsion to visualise acute social and political commentary. All his major works are painted in oils. They range in mood from dark, savage and sinister to frenetically energetic. The common denominator is a drive to chronicle diverse cultural, social and political episodes of the last seven decades through the lens of a self confessed artistic misfit.
In 1972 he travelled to Northern Ireland as an artist to create a record of The Troubles.[2] His dramatic and graphic paintings were based on sketches he made from close-up observation on both sides of the line. He was commissioned regularly by the author and publisher J. L. Carr to illustrate several of the small books of poetry that Carr published under the imprint of The Quince Tree Press.[3]
In observational quality, nuance and inventiveness Fiddes' canvasses rival the output of the great early satirist printmakers and painters of the 18th century - like Gillray, Hogarth and Goya. He cites Goya as one of his main influences. Yet, in style and technical relish, Fiddes' paintings are idiosyncratic interpretations of anti-establishment thinking, each one inventive in topic and storytelling as well as ingenious in composition and fiendish use of perspective,[4] with which he likes to test himself.
Northampton Museum & Art Gallery[5] are hosting Fiddes' first retrospective exhibition (10 July - 17 October 2021) to mark their re-opening after extensive remodelling. The museum is permanent home to 21 oil paintings by Fiddes as well as a few preparatory sketches. In their collection, and in this show, is one of his earliest paintings, 'Kowloon Riots'. This was painted in 1956 in response to the quelling of the riots that Fiddes witnessed while on his National Service in Kowloon, Hong Kong and it was shown at the Royal Society of British Arts (RBA)[6] at the time.
Fiddes works from his home studio in rural Northamptonshire. He is widowed and has three children - Mark and Clare from his first marriage and Cordelia from his second marriage.
External links
editReferences
edit- ^ "Plaque 7". www.cogenhoeheritage.org.uk.
- ^ "Paintings show 'horror' of Troubles". 8 February 2013 – via www.bbc.co.uk.
- ^ Byron Rogers (2003). The Last Englishman. The Life of J.L. Carr. London: Aurum Press.
- ^ "In observational quality, nuance and inventiveness Fiddes' canvasses rival the output of the great early satirist printmakes and painters of the 18th century".
- ^ "Northampton Museum & Art Gallery". 2021 – via www.northamptonmuseums.com/.
- ^ "RBA - Royal Society of British Arts".