Reigate, The High Street


(Sold) by Cecil Tatton-Winter; etching; Sheet: 25.0 x 33.5 cm; image (plate) 15.3 x 22.5 cm; (sight 18.2 x 25.0 cm).

‘Reigate, The High Street’, by Tatton-Winter; etching on wove paper. Signed in pencil lower right.

£55.00 (inc. UK shipping).

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Kymosie Gallery guarantees the authenticity and description of all works described on the site. 

Any work purchased from the Kymosie Gallery website and shown not to be as described may be returned for a full refund of the net price paid and received by Kymosie Gallery, subject to the gallery being notified within 14 days of receipt by the customer and the work then being returned to the gallery undamaged and in the condition that it was supplied by the Gallery.

Condition

Reigate, ‘The High Street’, by Cecil Tatton-Winter

The primary paper support has moderate overall discolouration and a strong mount line. There is some slight cockling along lower edge and several minor creases. Strong image.

Cecil Tatton-Winter (b.1895) was the son of the renowned watercolour artist William Tatton-Winter R.B.A. (1855-1928) and Edith Constance Tatton-Winter (born Fox Hudson).  Born in the North of England, William Tatton-Winter studied at the Manchester Academy of Fine Art and joined the Manchester Athenaeum Graphic Club.  However, he left the North of England to be closer to London and eventually settled in Reigate, Surrey.  He received royal recognition of his work from both Queen Victoria and Queen Mary and he exhibited Europe-wide.

Tatton-Winter’s son, Cecil, served in the army during the First World War with the Royal Hampshire Regiment and he considered making the army his career.  However, on his father’s advice he became an architect instead, also producing etchings and very fine work in watercolour.  He remained in Reigate where he is remembered and celebrated with his father as a successful artist.

Cecil Tatton-Winter married Glenolva Fanny H.M. Tatton-Winter and together they had four children.  He died in 1954, aged 59, and is buried alongside his family in Reigate Cemetery, near St Mary’s churchyard in Chart Lane, close to the Grammar School’s Garden of Remembrance whose wrought iron gates he designed.  As pointed out by Maureen Beasley’s ‘Five Centuries of Art in Sutton’* the Tatton-Winters rest in good company, the remains of the artists John Linnell and Samuel Palmer being nearby in Reigate Cemetery.

‘Five Centuries of Art in Sutton’, Maureen Beasley, 1989, London Borough of Sutton.


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