Mary Potter OBE British, 1900-1981
Born Mary Attenborough in Beckenham she upset her parents by choosing painting from her many talents. Whilst at the Slade she was awarded first prize for portrait painting and a place in a New English Art Club exhibition. She then decided she was working to a formula and ceremonially burned all her portraits.
Mary later married writer Stephen Potter and with two children continued to paint as she wished. It was while living by the Thames in Chiswick from 1927 that she began to dabble with the watery vision which she would explore for the rest of her life. An early member of the London Group Mary Potter also showed allegiance to the Seven and Five Society.
In 1951 the Potter family moved to Aldeburgh and it was this Suffolk fishing town that was to provide the inspiration for her finest art. After her divorce in 1955 her great friendship with the founders of the Aldeburgh Festival, Benjamin Britten and Peter Pears led to them swapping houses for six years. So she could paint overlooking the sea from Crag House.
During her isolation, with only holiday and occasional visits from artists such as John Piper, Prunella Clough and Sidney Nolan she pared down her vision, thinning her paint, blurring outlines and abolishing the horizon line and painted to ever greater acclaim.
Kenneth Clarke's conclusion that her paintings are "enchanting moments of heightened perception", should stand as her epitaph.
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London Art Fair
22 - 26 Jan 2025We are delighted to be exhibiting once again at the London Art Fair this January! The London Art Fair's extensive gallery line-up showcases a diverse cross-section of art from emerging...Read more -
Christmas Exhibition
7 Dec 2024 - 5 Jan 2025 AldeburghThompson’s Gallery, Aldeburgh are very excited to be holding our Christmas exhibition which opens on the 7th December and is going to be a treasure trove of beautiful paintings and...Read more -
40th Annual Exhibition
4 - 26 Jun 2022 AldeburghThe largest of the galleries' exhibitions, the Annual Exhibition features Modern British and contemporary artists, some new, some regulars, some returning faces, and some we could never leave out!Read more -
Modern British
15 May - 6 Jun 2021 AldeburghThe Modern British Art era began after the first World War, an inherently significant cultural period. This epoch saw the rise of painters and sculptors such as Henry Moore, John...Read more