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John Cooper
| John
Cooper was born in Merthyr and studied Painting and Stained
glass 1949 - 1956 at Swansea School of Art, becoming Assistant
Curator at the Glynn Vivian before entering teaching. He participated
in a number of important group exhibitions through the 1950's
and early 1960's, including 'Young Contemporaries' at Chenil
Galleries, Chelsea, London in 1953. He is considered a member
of that distinct group of Welsh painters that have become
known as the "Naïve Realists". Since his retirement
from teaching in 1998 he has been able to once again exhibit
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"My
early influences were Heinz Koppel, the German Expressionist,
who taught at Dowlais during the late forties and early
fifties and my father Frederick Cooper who was a student
of his for some years. My working experiences as a teenager
were in the offices of the eminent architect Tristan Edwards
and this stimulated my interest in the urban and industrial
environs of Merthyr and the adjoining valleys. George Fairley
was later to provide much guidance and encouragement.
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During
my formative years as a painter, I was one of a number of
artists for whom "the ordinary life in Welsh urban
and industrial communities had become a subject many artists
viewed enthusiastically". This urban and industrial
landscape of the South Wales valleys with their characteristic
hill-top triangular shapes of by-gone coal tips are often
unconsciously echoed in the middle distance and foreground
of my pictures, in the form of gable ended rows of terraced
houses and the variegated architectural facades of old Welsh
chapels; now sadly bingo halls or gyms.
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I
do not feel that any of the main media that I employ i.e.
acrylic, pen and ink, pastel, and charcoal, singly or combined
have any direct influence in my choice of subject matter,
but are a means to an end. Outdoor drawing and painting
plus digital photography together with many trips down memory
lane play an important part in the formation of my picture
making ideas."
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