Ted Raftery 1985
Can I just say WOW! This looks like a photograph!
As a child in England, Ted was constantly drawing and painting, mostly from his imagination. In his early teens he realized that he achieved better results when he sketched from nature.
He joined an art club and was able to draw from live models and plaster casts. This improved his skills markedly but he never attended an art school to receive formal tuition as at that time art schools were only teaching graphic arts and various modernism’s in vogue at that time.
Ted's interest lay in a more traditional approach and he continued along that path. By his early twenties he was married, had a family and job as an electrician. His painting became sporadic for a while but he continued to study the fine art in the English public art galleries, such as the National Gallery in London and the Walker Art Gallery in Liverpool.
On immigrating to Canada in 1974, the landscape here inspired him to take up the brush and palette again. At first he painted prairie scenes and grain elevators and always the big Alberta sky he admired so much. His interest in cross-country skiing led him to also paint mountain winters. By 1978 he had placed paintings with the Gainsborough Galleries in Calgary, and they were selling readily.
Now Ted’s painting grace the walls of many corporations and businesses and also many private homes in Canada, UK, USA, Hong Kong, Australia and many other places around the world.
I understand why he's so popular...that photo-realistic look he's captured so well of a stunning scene would please anyone to have it around to see daily! Thanks for doing this series!
ReplyDeleteWow, that is gorgeous, and it does look like a photo.
ReplyDeleteThat sure does look like a photo. Another amazing artist today Jackie.
ReplyDeleteI agree this looks like a photo and one of my home right now, too! I love his photo realism style painting.
ReplyDeleteIt amazing how many artist are self taught.
ReplyDeleteCoffee is on and stay safe
Isn't 'looks like a photo' the best compliment an artist can receive?
ReplyDeleteA stunning work.
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