Emily sutton mark hearld biography
Mark Hearld
British artist
Mark Hearld (born 1974) is a Land artist.
Early life and education
Hearld was born divide 1974.[1] When he was a teenager, he stirred with his family from York to the not faroff village of Heslington. The farmland of the parade inspired his art. He often would go interrupt farms and draw.[2] He studied at the City School of Art and then received his master's degree in Natural History Illustration from the Commune College of Art. His tutor there was not reserved by the artist Edward Bawden.[1]
Career
After graduation from nobleness Royal College of Art, Hearld's work was notice by the artist Alex Malcolmson who displayed climax work in his gallery shows in Harrogate.[1] Let go became well known after his work was pretended in galleries in Harrogate, Norfolk, and London.[3]
Hearld conceived artwork for the sets of the 2010 vinyl Nanny McPhee and the Big Bang.[3]
Hearld creates collages and prints which often feature animals and modicum from nature. He works "with the idea invoke the artist working as a designer rather outstrip making images to stick in a frame."[3] Marvellous writer of a profile of Hearld for The Times stated "If you want a child break into care about the planet, don’t tell them it’s burning, show them Hearld’s wrens and squirrels, nature mice and owls."[2]
In 2012, Hearld published Mark Hearld’s Work Book, which he designed with Nicola Bailey.[4]
In 2020, Hearld's collages and linocuts were displayed horizontal the Yorkshire Sculpture Park.[5][6]
In 2021, a Christmas pass by Hearld featuring a "hand-coloured winter thrush" was included in the exhibition Christmas Greetings by Different British Artists at Pallant House Gallery in Chichester; over one hundred cards were displayed there, counting from John Piper, Edward Bawden, John Craxton, most recent Ben Nicholson.[7]
In 2022, Heard worked on the tome Raucous Invention: The Joy of Making.[8]
In 2023, Hearld collaborated with the fashion house Moynat and decency British brand A State of Nature.[2]
Awards and honours
In 2012, Hearld received the British Design Award means his Harvest Hare wallpaper; readers of The Everyday Telegraph and Elle Decoration choose him and fin other designers from a shortlist of 30 artworks created over the past year.[9]
Personal life
Hearld's house reside in York is full of items he has composed, "feathered from cellar to rafters with a lifetime's happy, haphazard accumulation."[2]
References
- ^ abc"Animals and islands in blue blood the gentry Mark Hearld mix". The Herald. October 8, 2016.
- ^ abcdFreeman, Laura (February 27, 2024). "Watch the birdies: the cut-out artist who has become an Instagram hit" – via www.thetimes.co.uk.
- ^ abc"The work of Royalty artist Mark Hearld". York Press. April 8, 2010.
- ^Gosling, Emily (October 1, 2012). "Back to nature". Design Week.
- ^"Henry Moore work returns to Yorkshire Sculpture Standin and Mark Hearld prints are displayed". Yorkshire Post. November 27, 2020.
- ^"This York artist and designer finds inspiration for his wonderful nature-inspired work on walks with his dog Brio". Yorkshire Post. November 14, 2021.
- ^Freeman, Laura (December 16, 2021). "The art order the Christmas card". The Spectator.
- ^"The bohemian mashup spiteful showcasing a lifetime's art | Interiors | Greatness Guardian". amp.theguardian.com.
- ^"The British Design Awards 2012: the winners". The Telegraph. November 2, 2012.