L S Lowry – Old Steps Stockport – Signed Limited Edition Lithograph (Ask)

“Mrs Swindell’s picture”
Signed, Limited edition print of 850
Image size 16″x 12″

In stock

Description

“L S Lowry – The Old Steps Stockport” 

In Good Original Condition.

Rare Hand Signed Signed original lithograph edition of 75. Lithograph on beige tint background.
Image size 24″x 19″ (Framed Size – TBC ) One of these Original Lithographs is held in the Tate Gallery, London

Beautifully framed & mounted – in addition it is Glazed with Museum Glass

Ganymed Lithographs

This original lithograph was drawn for the purpose, and not existing in any other form. eg. There is no single Original therefore. Due to the lengthy ‘hands-on’ process and the fact that no two lithographs are identical. They are regarded as ‘original’ lithograph prints.
Published in limited editions of 75. Each copy is numbered and has been hand signed by the artist.
The lithograph is printed in black with a tint background.

L S Lowry – Old Steps Stockport – Signed Original Lithograph

 

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L S Lowry (1887 – 1976). Laurence Stephen Lowry was born in November 1887 in Manchester. He was the only child of Irish-born R S Lowry and Elizabeth Lowry (née Hobson). He attended a local school in Victoria Park, but took private lessons from William Fitz. Before starting work as a clerk for a firm of chartered accountants in 1904.
From 1905-1915 he attended drawing and painting classes at the Municipal College of Art. Which later became Manchester College of Art, and now part of Manchester Metropolitan University. Where he was tutored by Adolphe Valette.

L S Lowry – Old Steps Stockport

L S Lowry moved to Pendlebury in Salford with his parents in 1909. Where he was to live for nearly 40 years. During this time he attended art classes at Salford School of Art. Subsequently he developing an interest in the urban and industrial landscape. He exhibited with the Manchester Academy of Fine Arts from 1919. As well as entering paintings in the Paris Salon.
By the early 1930s he was exhibiting at the Royal Academy in London. He was awarded an honorary MA at Manchester University in 1945. Doctor of Letters in 1961. Elected to the Royal Academy in 1962, and given freedom of the City of Salford in 1965.

He lived in Mottram until he died in 1976. A death marked by unprecedented homage by the ‘ordinary people’ of Manchester.
Lowry is unquestionably one of the most celebrated British artists and his unique contribution to recording the period. Culture and landscape of industrial Salford and Manchester is without parallel. His work is a most distinctive and comprehensive record of the pre and post World War Two northern industrial town.

L.S LOWRY

Many people associate Lowry with “matchstick men”, but he is known to have produced over 10,000 works. Ranging from finished oil paintings to hastily drawn sketches. The local industrial scene was his most frequent subject but he also painted seascapes and portraits. He was a great humourist and had intense insight into human nature, characterising it without sentiment.

Later in his life L S Lowry concentrated on producing paintings of figures. Either singly or in groups, invariably against a white background. He also produced thousand of pencil drawings during his lifetime. These are now very collectable.
L S Lowry died without a registered doctor, leading the galleries a merry dance. Hoping to inherit a few paintings in his will, they courted him in his old age only to find he had left them all to a girl. Who was also called Lowry, who had written him a letter years before, asking how she could become an artist.

Lowry’s status as one of the major British artists of the 20th Century was reinforced with the painting “Going To The Match”. This was sold at Auction for a record £1.9 million to the Professional Footballers Association.
The Lowry Centre in Salford Quays, now holds a major collection of his work.

We always hold a great selection of works by L.S Lowry however please contact us beforehand to check stock.

L S Lowry – Old Steps Stockport

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