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John Randall Bratby

(1928-1992), Painter and writer; Editor-in-chief of Art Quarterly

Sitter in 25 portraits
Artist of 3 portraits
Bratby studied at the Royal College of Art (1951-54), and it was for his generation of RCA students that David Sylvester coined the phrase 'Kitchen Sink', to describe the realism of their art. In 1956 he was included in the British Pavilion at the Venice Biennale, and in 1957 won first prize in the Junior Section of the John Moores Liverpool exhibition. Bratby's vigorous realism with its debt to Van Gogh and Soutine went out of fashion in a time of Abstract Expressionism and Pop Art in the 60s, during which he wrote the semi-autobiographical Breakdown (1960). In the 1970s he made it his task to paint portraits of 'names', from tycoons and businessmen to television stars. He became a Royal Academician in 1971.

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John Randall Bratby, by Chris Ware, for  Keystone Press Agency Ltd - NPG x194056

John Randall Bratby

by Chris Ware, for Keystone Press Agency Ltd
bromide print, 7 February 1973
NPG x194056

John Randall Bratby, by Paul Joyce - NPG x13404

John Randall Bratby

by Paul Joyce
bromide print on card mount, July 1975
NPG x13404

John Randall Bratby, by Nicolo Vogel - NPG x4278

John Randall Bratby

by Nicolo Vogel
bromide print
NPG x4278

Web image not currently available

John Randall Bratby

by Lewis Morley
bromide fibre print, 1960s
NPG x47124

Web image not currently available

John Randall Bratby

by Lewis Morley
resin print, circa 1964
NPG x35926

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great-british

23 August 2015, 22:39

The painter Jean Cooke was the artist's first wife: their son together David, also appears in a family portrait.