Catherine Olive Moody

ARTIST

Moody, Catherine Olive

1920 – 2009

Catherine was the daughter of the artist Victor Hume
Moody. She studied under him at Malvern School of Art, at Royal College
of Art with Gilbert Spencer and at Birmingham College of Art under
Bernard Fleetwood-Walker. She taught at Manchester College of Art, then
was head of Malvern School of Art, 1962-80.
She was a designer for Dent Allcroft and wrote “Silhouette of Malvern”,1953, and “Painter’s Workshop”, 1982. Catherine Moody was especially drawn to working in pastel producing interiors, compositions and portraits. She was a member of Pastel Society and president of Malvern Art Club.
She showed at PS and RP. Worcester City Art Gallery and Malvern Festival
Theatre hold her work. She lived in Malvern, Worcestershire.

The following information is from her obituary in the monthly magazine of the Malvern Priory, many thanks to Stephen Whittle and the author J.E.C. Peters.

“Catherine Moody was a prominent Malvern resident; she was a respected artist, teacher of painting, poet and writer. She lived in Malvern for most of her life. Her father, an artist and portrait painter of note, was Head of the Malvern School of Art from 1935.
Catherine Moody trained initially under her father, later at the Royal College of Art; she succeeded her father as Head of the Malvern School of Art on his retirement in 1962. She continued to paint and to research aspects of painting and of local history until almost the end of her life, with the aid of various helpers, in spite of growing limitations of health and eyesight.
She had a very lively and enquiring mind. She held salons and symposia at her home on aspects of art and philosophy; a late one was on green energy, and, given the streams on the Malvern Hills, hydro-electricity was not forgotten. She was an encourager of talent, this continuing long after her official retirement in 1980.
She had a great interest in people and an amazing memory, was generous and most hospitable. She was a member of the Pastel Society, Life President of the Malvern Art Club, member of the Malvern Writers’ Circle, and founded the Malvern Architectural Society, initially partly to research the work of Elgar’s friend, Troyte Griffith. She wrote “The Silhouette of Malvern” in 1953 to explain the importance and significance of Malvern’s Victorian architecture, and to campaign for its preservation, in which she was in the forefront of architectural conservation. The book was illustrated with her drawings, including one of her painting of the drawing room at Eastnor Castle, which she was very proud to have had the opportunity to do.
She was also interested in the geology of the Malvern Hills, and in how they were formed. She wrote a hymn for the millennium, which was performed at the Priory to music by David Cooper. This, and her choice of hymns for her funeral, showed her faith. Her funeral was attended by, amongst others, former pupils, helpers in her art work, members of the Art Club, as well as friends, of which she had made many. The main tribute was by Charles Morgan.”

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Catherine Olive Moody

ARTIST

Moody, Catherine Olive

1920 – 2009

Catherine was the daughter of the artist Victor Hume
Moody. She studied under him at Malvern School of Art, at Royal College
of Art with Gilbert Spencer and at Birmingham College of Art under
Bernard Fleetwood-Walker. She taught at Manchester College of Art, then
was head of Malvern School of Art, 1962-80.
She was a designer for Dent Allcroft and wrote “Silhouette of Malvern”,1953, and “Painter’s Workshop”, 1982. Catherine Moody was especially drawn to working in pastel producing interiors, compositions and portraits. She was a member of Pastel Society and president of Malvern Art Club.
She showed at PS and RP. Worcester City Art Gallery and Malvern Festival
Theatre hold her work. She lived in Malvern, Worcestershire.

The following information is from her obituary in the monthly magazine of the Malvern Priory, many thanks to Stephen Whittle and the author J.E.C. Peters.

“Catherine Moody was a prominent Malvern resident; she was a respected artist, teacher of painting, poet and writer. She lived in Malvern for most of her life. Her father, an artist and portrait painter of note, was Head of the Malvern School of Art from 1935.
Catherine Moody trained initially under her father, later at the Royal College of Art; she succeeded her father as Head of the Malvern School of Art on his retirement in 1962. She continued to paint and to research aspects of painting and of local history until almost the end of her life, with the aid of various helpers, in spite of growing limitations of health and eyesight.
She had a very lively and enquiring mind. She held salons and symposia at her home on aspects of art and philosophy; a late one was on green energy, and, given the streams on the Malvern Hills, hydro-electricity was not forgotten. She was an encourager of talent, this continuing long after her official retirement in 1980.
She had a great interest in people and an amazing memory, was generous and most hospitable. She was a member of the Pastel Society, Life President of the Malvern Art Club, member of the Malvern Writers’ Circle, and founded the Malvern Architectural Society, initially partly to research the work of Elgar’s friend, Troyte Griffith. She wrote “The Silhouette of Malvern” in 1953 to explain the importance and significance of Malvern’s Victorian architecture, and to campaign for its preservation, in which she was in the forefront of architectural conservation. The book was illustrated with her drawings, including one of her painting of the drawing room at Eastnor Castle, which she was very proud to have had the opportunity to do.
She was also interested in the geology of the Malvern Hills, and in how they were formed. She wrote a hymn for the millennium, which was performed at the Priory to music by David Cooper. This, and her choice of hymns for her funeral, showed her faith. Her funeral was attended by, amongst others, former pupils, helpers in her art work, members of the Art Club, as well as friends, of which she had made many. The main tribute was by Charles Morgan.”

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+ Share Artist

SKU: 10891

Catherine Olive Moody (1920 - 2009)

Head Study (Dawn Cookson), 1943

£675.00

SKU: 10890

Catherine Olive Moody (1920 - 2009)

Standing female nude with hands on hips, 1943

£900.00

SKU: 5529

Catherine Olive Moody (1920 - 2009)

Studio Lighting, circa 1982

£975.00

SKU: 4781

Catherine Olive Moody (1920 - 2009)

The beggars opera, circa 1940

£1,000.00

SKU: 4678

Catherine Olive Moody (1920 - 2009)

Rosa Primula in the Garden

£430.00

SKU: 4668

Catherine Olive Moody (1920 - 2009)

Hill Fire, seen from C.P.O.?, 1989

£470.00

SKU: 4639

Catherine Olive Moody (1920 - 2009)

The Mixture, circa 1982

£450.00

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SKU: 7919

Catherine Olive Moody (1920 - 2009)

The Malvern Hills
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SKU: 5785

Catherine Olive Moody (1920 - 2009)

The Malvern Art School, 1982
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SKU: 5606

Catherine Olive Moody (1920 - 2009)

Bedroom with disgarded boots and ornate metal bed, 1940’s
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SKU: 4896

Catherine Olive Moody (1920 - 2009)

Study of a crucible on a white and brown ground
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SKU: 4897

Catherine Olive Moody (1920 - 2009)

Paint pots and white spirit
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SKU: 4683

Catherine Olive Moody (1920 - 2009)

Study for Composition ‘Supper at Emmaus’, July 1983
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SKU: 4677

Catherine Olive Moody (1920 - 2009)

Tyndale Monument, Wootton-under-Edge
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SKU: 4679

Catherine Olive Moody (1920 - 2009)

Summer flowers in a White Jug
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SKU: 4680

Catherine Olive Moody (1920 - 2009)

A corner of the artists’s studio
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SKU: 4682

Catherine Olive Moody (1920 - 2009)

Cloud study, late evening
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SKU: 4664

Catherine Olive Moody (1920 - 2009)

Standing to Attention
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SKU: 4665

Catherine Olive Moody (1920 - 2009)

Study of Clematis Viticella and closed Hand (seeding?)
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SKU: 4666

Catherine Olive Moody (1920 - 2009)

The Harbour Office
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SKU: 4673

Catherine Olive Moody (1920 - 2009)

Burgundy Hybrid Tea Rose
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SKU: 4658

Catherine Olive Moody (1920 - 2009)

On the landing, Lorne Lodge, Sling Lane, Malvern, 1968
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SKU: 4661

Catherine Olive Moody (1920 - 2009)

Stairwell of a derelict house, circa 1968
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SKU: 4662

Catherine Olive Moody (1920 - 2009)

Landscape viewed through a gothic arch, circa 1968