Roger Hampson (1925–1996) was born in Tyldesley, Lancashire, England. He was a teacher, painter and printmaker, taking inspiration from everyday surroundings, people and the industries prevalent in the area where he lived and worked.[1]

Roger Hampson
Born1925
Died1996
NationalityBritish
EducationManchester School of Art
Known forPrint-making

Background

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Roger Hampson was born in Union Street, Tyldesley, and moved to Johnson Street when he was three. He attended Leigh Grammar School and served in the Royal Navy during World War II.[2] After the war he attended Manchester School of Art before becoming a teacher.

Career

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He spent a short time in Hereford before returning to Manchester where he worked as a graphic designer and began to exhibit paintings as part of a group of post-war artists who developed the realist tradition established by L S Lowry and Harry Rutherford.[3]

He spent most of his life in Tyldesley, an industrial town surrounded by collieries and dominated by Caleb Wright's Barnfield Mills. He moved to the cotton town of Bolton where he became head of Bolton College of Art.

References

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Notes

  1. ^ 20 artworks by or after Roger Hampson, Art UK. Retrieved 10 October 2012.
  2. ^ Whittle 2009, p. 4
  3. ^ Whittle 2009, p. 8

Bibliography

  • Whittle, Stephen (2009), Roger Hampson a lost landscape, Gallery Oldham, ISBN 978-0-9550385-5-6
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Professional and academic associations
Preceded by President of the Manchester Academy of Fine Arts
1969–78
Succeeded by