‘Kingfisher’ no:1

£440.00

‘Kingfisher’ no:1

Including UK delivery

1 in stock

Description

‘Kingfisher’ no:1

Limited Edition Print

14/30

Illustrator of The Lost Words 

This book is a collaboration between Jackie and Robert MacFarlane, author of Landmarks and The Wild Places and is available from Old Chapel Gallery and prints related to the book ware in stock now.

Collect from gallery £410

Including UK delivery £440

Mount size 60 x 50 cm
Image size 40 x 30 cm

This beautiful image features a colourful kingfisher perched on a branch.

Full size, limited edition print by Jackie Morris.
This beautiful print featuring original Jackie Morris artwork is part of a limited edition collection.

Printed  with fade-resistant archival inks printed on high quality acid free natural white 315gsm paper with incredibly fine detail. Mounts are made in Conservation Grade Board 2500 micron and cellophane wrapped.

Jackie was born in Birmingham and lived there until at the age of four when her parents moved away to Evesham.

“Here I grew up and remember little of those times. I do know that from at least the age of six I wanted to be an artist. I watched my dad drawing a picture of a lapwing, making a bird appear on a piece of paper using only a pencil, and I thought it was some magic that made this happen. So there and then I decided to learn how to conjure birds from paper and colour.

I went to school in Evesham to Prince Henry’s High School and I remember walking to school past shop fronts above which elegant buildings grew. I used to get told off at school for drawing and dreaming. Now I get paid to do both.

I remember walking in the park by the river, bank voles and weeping willows and bright flashes of kingfishers. I loved the ferry at Hampton where the ferryman pulled you across the river to a land of fields and blackberries, where my dad would walk with me and show me how to find birds’ nests and tales of when he was a boy.

After school I went to college, first in Hereford, then to Exeter where they told me that I would never make it as an illustrator and from there I escaped to Bath Academy, set in a beautiful stately home in Corsham. Here I developed a love for peacocks. These bright birds with their ridiculous tails would fly into our gardens.

After college I moved briefly to London, just off Balham High Road. I thought you had to live in London because that is where most of the publishing houses are. (It didn’t take me long to realize that I was not born to live in a city) It was here that my real education began as I took my portfolio around magazine publishers and book publishers. I worked in magazines and books for seven years, for The New Statesman, New Socialist, Independent, Guardian and Radio Times. I designed cards and calendars for Greenpeace and Amnesty International and fell into children’s books by accident.

I moved to Wales just before starting my first children’s book, Jo’s Storm, by Caroline Pitcher and have lived in the same place ever since, a small cottage held together by spider’s webs. Cats come and go. At the moment I share the house with Tom and Hannah, my son and daughter, Floss and Bella, two odd dogs, and Maurice, Pixie, Elmo, Martha and Max, cats of various colour but mostly ginger.”