Tales from Timbuctoo, was compiled by C. Smedley, and published by Dent in 1935. Maxwell Armfield’s illustrations where exhibited at the Raeburn Gallery (1935) and the Fine Art Society, (1973).
Provenance: Alexander Ballard
Foxing; one small tear
Tales from Timbuctoo, was compiled by C. Smedley, and published by Dent in 1935. Maxwell Armfield’s illustrations where exhibited at the Raeburn Gallery (1935) and the Fine Art Society, (1973).
Provenance: Alexander Ballard
Foxing; one small tear
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Painter and decorative artist, especially in tempera, and writer. Born in Ringwood, Hampshire, Armfield was educated at Birmingham School of Art – there is a Birminfham Arts and Crafts flavour in his pictures – then in Paris and Italy. Exhibited extensively, including RA, Fine Art Society, for long a noted dealer in his work, NEAC, Leicester Galleries and abroad. His work is held by the British Museum, provincial and overseas galleries. He illustrated about 20 books and wrote A Manual of Tempera Painting, Tempera Painting Today, An Artist in America and An Artist in Italy. During World War I, with his writer wife Constance Smedley, Armfield attempted to set up a high-flown peoples’ Greenleaf Theatre in his studio, an abortive venture amusingly recalled by Margaret Gardiner in her book A Scatter of Memories. Armfield was a painter of landscape and still life well crafted and full of detail. Lived in Bath, Somerset.