Patrick Heron
(British, 1920–1999)
Biography
Patrick Heron was a painter, designer, and author who made noteworthy contributions to the development of abstract art. Employing the term “non-figurative” to describe his exploration of vibrant color, he believed that all art could be considered abstract. Heron worked to make all areas of a composition into areas of equal importance, turning the English painting convention of narrative, figurative paintings on their head. “The flavor of words is intensely anti-visual,” he once observed. “Strictly speaking painting cannot be written about.” Born in Yorkshire on January 30, 1920, he attended the Slade School of Art in London. A major retrospective exhibition of his work was held at Tate Britain in 1998, and Heron won the Grand Prize at the John Moores Prize Exhibition in Liverpool in 1959 and the silver medal at the São Paulo Art Biennial in 1965. His work is in a number of important collections, including The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, the Carnegie Institute in Pittsburgh, The National Portrait Gallery in London, and many others. He died at his home in Cornwall, England on March 20, 1999, at the age of 79.
Patrick Heron Artworks
Patrick Heron
Blue with lime, umber, dull red and orange..., 1976
Sale Date: June 28, 2007
Auction Closed
Patrick Heron
Small horizon with orange, lime, lemon and..., 1957
Sale Date: June 28, 2007
Auction Closed
Patrick Heron
Ice-green in dark red - Vertical - Feb 1971, 1971
Sale Date: June 8, 2007
Auction Closed
Patrick Heron
Indigo round umber and Venetian and into..., 1968
Sale Date: May 22, 2007
Auction Closed