Lionel Bulmer, Figures on a Beach, c1948
Lionel Bulmer RA (1919-1992) oil on canvas depicting the dismantling of coastal defences at Bacton Beach in Norfolk. Portrait of woman in nursing uniform to verso. Dimensions: 41cm x 36 cm. Unframed.
Lionel Bulmer was born in London and studied at Clapham School of Art and the Royal College of Art where he was taught by Carel Weight and Ruskin Spear.
He exhibited for many years at the Leicester Galleries and later at the New Art Centre in London. A member of the New English Art Club, a group that had been founded in 1886 as an exhibiting society dedicated to promoting avant-garde painting techniques of the French Impressionists, his specialist subject was the Suffolk landscape, often small pictures painted with a quiet, sensitive precision.
Lionel Bulmer RA (1919-1992) oil on canvas depicting the dismantling of coastal defences at Bacton Beach in Norfolk. Portrait of woman in nursing uniform to verso. Dimensions: 41cm x 36 cm. Unframed.
Lionel Bulmer was born in London and studied at Clapham School of Art and the Royal College of Art where he was taught by Carel Weight and Ruskin Spear.
He exhibited for many years at the Leicester Galleries and later at the New Art Centre in London. A member of the New English Art Club, a group that had been founded in 1886 as an exhibiting society dedicated to promoting avant-garde painting techniques of the French Impressionists, his specialist subject was the Suffolk landscape, often small pictures painted with a quiet, sensitive precision.
Lionel Bulmer RA (1919-1992) oil on canvas depicting the dismantling of coastal defences at Bacton Beach in Norfolk. Portrait of woman in nursing uniform to verso. Dimensions: 41cm x 36 cm. Unframed.
Lionel Bulmer was born in London and studied at Clapham School of Art and the Royal College of Art where he was taught by Carel Weight and Ruskin Spear.
He exhibited for many years at the Leicester Galleries and later at the New Art Centre in London. A member of the New English Art Club, a group that had been founded in 1886 as an exhibiting society dedicated to promoting avant-garde painting techniques of the French Impressionists, his specialist subject was the Suffolk landscape, often small pictures painted with a quiet, sensitive precision.