His book, The Mountains of Snowdonia in Art was published by Gwasg Carreg Gwalch in 2015.
Early life and education
Born in Pembroke, Peter Bishop was educated at Sibford School in Oxfordshire from 1964 to 1970. He did a two-year foundation course in art and design at Banbury and Bicester College from 1970 to 1972, then studied painting at the Slade School of Fine Art from 1972 to 1975 under Professor William Coldstream’s tenure. Tutors included Bernard Cohen and Rita Donagh. His degree show included Alpine landscape and pen and ink drawings of mountains, influenced by the writings and visual examples of John Ruskin. Later the same year he held his first solo exhibition of Alpine paintings at the Amwell Gallery, London. From 1976 to 1977 he studied art education at the Institute of Education, University of London.
In 1983 he moved to live near Ludlow in south Shropshire. From 1985 to 2003 he was a lecturer in fine art at Shrewsbury College of Arts and Technology. He was also a visiting lecturer in art history at Birmingham University and a visiting tutor in painting at the University of Wolverhampton School of Art.
In 1995 he obtained an MA with distinction in the history of art from the Birmingham Institute of Art and Design. In 1996 he returned to the Slade to study fine art on the PhD programme, whose tutors included Bernard Cohen (fine art) and David Bindman (history of art). After two years at the Slade he transferred to Aberystwyth University School of Art where he was supervised by Professor Alistair Crawford, obtaining his PhD in 2001.[2]
Artistic career
The Alpine series of paintings continued until 1987, supplemented by landscape views of the high hills of Shropshire and the Malvern Hills. After a solo exhibition at the Hereford Museum and Art Gallery in 1987 the artist decided to concentrate on the mountains of Snowdonia as his main subject. Also in 1987 he joined the Kilvert Gallery[3] in Clyro near Hay on Wye, at the invitation of its director Elizabeth Organ. The gallery represented the artist until it closed in 2009.
Peter Bishop has been invited to participate in many group exhibitions including London's Royal Academy of Arts Summer Shows and has held ten solo exhibitions, the most recent at MOMA Wales in 2012. His work is in public and private collections. In an Arts Review, Anthony Vettise wrote 'What is very striking is the searching quality of this artist's working process, one senses the struggle to find solutions through trial and error, the building of marks and colour and the reworking of ideas. Ultimately he searches for pictorial equivalents of personal experience of his chosen landscape. The experience is romantic in its vision of grandeur of space and immensity of nature.'[4]
In 2016 the artist co-curated the exhibition ‘In Snowdonia’ at Storiel, Bangor.[5] In October 2016 he was invited to give the annual Thomas Pennant Society lecture at Holywell. He is also an invited speaker and consultant on art in Snowdonia to various audiences. In March 2018 he became the Honorary President of the Ludlow Art Society.[6]
Snowdon from above Nantlle, 2021Cader Idris (Craig Cau), 1992Llyn y Cau, Cader Idris, 1996
Personal life
Peter was married to Jenny Beaumont and they had two daughters.[1] His death from pneumonia at the age of 68 was announced on 18 July 2022.[1]
Peter Bishop – Cader Idris, exhibition catalogue with 33 colour plates, includes essays: Of Mountains and Memories by Dr. Pete Davis and Cader Idris – Wilson's View by Dr. Peter Bishop Pub. Peter Bishop & MOMA Wales 2012, ISBN978-0-9571788-0-9
Peter Bishop, The Mountains of Snowdonia in Art: The Visualisation of Mountain Scenery from the mid-Eighteenth Century to the Present Day. Pub. Gwasg Carreg Gwalch, 2015. ISBN978-1-84524-227-5[10]
Articles
Contributed to BBC News feature: Snowdonia: Where dreams are hatched and challenges met. 19 April 2017[11]
Campaign for National Parks, Snowdonia: ‘Cader Idris: Wilson’s View’, Published online, 19 April 2018[12]
Campaign for National Parks, Snowdonia: 'Pont Aberglaslyn: a picturesque landscape', Published online, 15 October 2018[13]
Campaign for National Parks, Snowdonia: 'Snowdon From Capel Curig: A Classical Viewpoint', Published online, 18 March 2019[14]
The British Art Journal XIX, 3: 'Thomas Pennant (1726–98): The Journey to Snowdon and its influence on artists visiting North Wales', Published 26 March 2019, pp.87–95[15]
Campaign for National Parks, Snowdonia: 'Llyn Idwal: A Sublime Viewpoint', Published online, 17 October 2019[16]
Campaign for National Parks, Snowdonia: ‘Snowdon: Wilson’s View’, Published online, 10 February 2020[17]
Bibliography
Margaret Hawes, Oxford Mail, 22 September 1977
Julia Lacey, Arts Review, 11 May 1979, p.204
Anthony Vettise, Arts Review, 4 October 1991, p.506, colour plate p.507.
Barbara Rae (ed) Royal Academy Illustrated, 1998, colour plate p.50.
‘Art for Amnesty’ Living etc., May 2001, text and colour plate p.22.
Paul Joyner, Cader Idris, exhibition catalogue, National Library of Wales, 2001, p.3.
Jo King (ed) Ludlow Open: Rural Showcase for Contemporary Art, 2013, text and colour plate p.15
‘In Snowdonia’ exhibition catalogue, Storiel, Bangor, 2016, text and colour plate p.26.
Mary-Ann Constantine and Elizabeth Edwards, Curious Travellers, Movement Landscape, Art, exhibition catalogue, University of Wales Centre for Advanced Welsh and Celtic Studies, Aberystwyth, 2017, text & colour plate, p.6, text and colour plate pp.34–5.[18]
Robin Simon (ed) The British Art Journal, Volume XXI No. 3, Winter 2020/21, p.107, Editor's Choice: Peter Bishop, The Mountains of Snowdonia in Art, Gwasg Carreg Gwalch, 2015.
References
Williams, David (18 July 2022). "Peter Bishop obituary". The Guardian. Retrieved 19 July 2022.
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