A BLUE plaque to remember Dudley-born artist Percy Shakespeare has been unveiled by the Mayor of Dudley.
The plaque was unveiled in St James’s Road on the façade of the old Dudley Museum and former Dudley School of Art where Percy Shakespeare was a student in the 1920s.
From Kates Hill, Dudley, the talented artist who was born in 1906 and died in 1943 is famous for his flowing but precise figure drawing technique, his powerful portraits and a series of pictures depicting 1930s leisure activities, such as tennis, bathing, boating, cricket, an afternoon at the ice rink and most famously, a visit to the tropical bird house at Dudley Zoo.
He exhibited his oil paintings at the Royal Academy, Paris Salon, the Dudley Art Circle, and Royal Birmingham Society of Artists - and he was elected Associate of the Royal Birmingham Society of Artists in 1936.
Ivo Shaw, principal of Dudley Art School, called him “the best painter in oils the school has produced”.
Councillor Anne Millward, the Mayor of Dudley, said: "The blue plaque is a fabulous way to recognise Percy Shakespeare’s talent and keep his memory alive. The council has a number of his paintings in our collection and we are really lucky to have these. His artwork is outstanding and it will be a privilege to unveil the plaque to commemorate him and his work."
The Mayor was joined at the unveiling on Wednesday January 26 by Ivo Shaw’s son, Robin Shaw, who wrote the biography of Shakespeare who also studied anatomical drawing at the renowned Birmingham School of Art.
Sadly, the life of Percy Shakespeare was cut short in May 1943: while serving at a Naval base he was out in the open air when bombs were dropped from a plane near Marine Gate, Brighton.
Robin Shaw said: "My father, Ivo Shaw, always thought Percy Shakespeare was the most talented student he had had in a long career in art. In 1922, when he was principal of Dudley Art school, he discovered Percy, a small boy from the slums loitering in the art gallery. He gave him paper and pencil only to be astonished at Percy’s natural talent.
"My father would be delighted he is being remembered with a blue plaque."
The plaque has been funded by The National Lottery Heritage Fund and Dudley Council through the Dudley Townscape Heritage programme.
Dudley Museum at the Archives is hosting free, short talks about some of Percy’s paintings on Monday February 28, which would have been his birthday.
Places need to be pre-booked either by calling 01384 812750 or booking online through Eventbrite (search Dudley Museum and Percy Shakespeare).
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