Irene Bache

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Irene Bache
Born23 March 1901
Camberwell School of Art
Known forPainter and teacher

Irene Mary Bache (23 March 1901 – 24 May 1999) was a British artist. Although born in London, and widely travelled, Bache lived and established her career in Wales, in and around Swansea.

Biography

Bache was born in

Camberwell School of Art.[2] She taught art in a series of schools in Croydon, Peterborough, Worthing and Whitchurch before lecturing for a short time at the Royal College of Art.[3][1]

In 1942 Bache was appointed head of the Arts and Crafts department at Swansea College of Education, a post she retained until her retirement in 1966.[3] She brought radical ideas on pupil participation to the teaching of art and was active as an artist in her own right.[1] She participated in a number of group shows in Swansea and Cardiff and became active within the Swansea Art Society serving as both its Chair' and Vice-President at different times.[3] She had a solo exhibition at the Glynn Vivian Art Gallery in Swansea during 1954 and the College of Education mounted a retrospective to mark her retirement in 1966.[2]

After her retirement, Bache set up a private studio and continued to teach and paint, specialising in landscapes and botanical subjects.[2][1] She continued to participate in group shows and exhibited at the National Eisteddfod of Wales in 1974. In 1981 she published and illustrated Gower Poems, a volume inspired by the Gower Peninsula where she was living. She supplied illustrations for a 1992 volume on wild mushrooms.[1] Solo shows of her work were held to mark her ninetieth birthday both at the Glynn Vivian Gallery and elsewhere in Swansea.[2]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e R. M. Healey (23 June 1999). "Obituary: Irene Bache". The Independent. Retrieved 22 January 2019.
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