Sheridan Russell Gallery
Albert Irvin RA
Albert Irvin studied at Northampton School of Art from 1940 to 1941, before serving as a navigator in the RAF during World War II. He went on to study at Goldsmiths College where he later returned to teach between 1962 and 1983. He also taught at art colleges throughout Britain.
Irvin’s first solo exhibition was held in 1960 at 57 Gallery, London. A major retrospective of his work from 1960 to 1989 was held at the Serpentine Gallery, London in 1990. He continued to exhibit regularly at Gimpel Fils, London. Irvin was awarded a Travel Award to America by the Arts Council in 1968 and later received an Arts Council Major Award. He was elected a Royal Academician in 1998 and lived and worked in London.
Paul Moorhouse, Tate curator and author of the book Albert Irvin: Life to Painting, wrote of him: “even to those familiar with his work, seeing a new painting by Irvin can be an extraordinary experience akin to discovering a young, energetic artist in the first flush of ambition.
Given the force of its restless energy, its freshness and the sense it communicates of an artist in love with his chosen activity, it is even more surprising to realise that this is the work of an artist in his late seventies.”
Irvin’s work developed from a time when he considered that in order to give the necessary gravitas to a painting it had to be dark and sombre, through to a growing realisation that high key colour can be crucial in the achievement of full expressive and communicative force.
His work was exhibited in the Sir Hugh Casson Room for Friends at the Royal Academy in 2011.
Signed Print Edition of 75 (sold out) 73 x 93 cm £1,750 This print is in the National Galleries of Scotland collection.
1972 Watercolour on paper 59 x 77 cm £5,000
Signed Print 1992 75 x 94 cm Edition of 225 £2,750
Signed Print 1990 51 x 74 cm Edition of 120 (sold out), £1,750