Yes, the handsome one on the right is Peter my dear husband, and yes, its just the hair which has turned silver now apart from that, he looks the same !
Yes, that is a good painting of Peter. Am I imagining it, or is there something mildly Spanish about the beard?
I have decided to form myself into a bank, as I could do with a few billion. If Gordon Brown would like to send me some money, he can rest assured that it will be used to free up the economy, especially my own econony, and that he, or his great-grandchildren, will get it back – eventually.
Maria Spilsbury Birchwood
started painting at an early age at the studio of the Spanish painter Don Valero Lecha and the muralist Violeta Bonilla, pupil to the great Mexican painter, Diego de Rivera. She received her first commission at the age of 13: a commission to paint a bullfight.When she was in her teens, she entered a competition and learned that she had won first prize. She was presented to the sponsor of the competition,who offered her a scholarship on behalf of the Dante Alligheri Society to study art in Rome.
Maria continued her painting studies in Madrid, Spain at the school of San Fernando under the tutelage of the foremost landscape painter Jose Sanchez Carralero. She moved to England where, in 1982, she married forensic genealogist Peter Birchwood.
Over the years, Maria has exhibited her work widely in different countries; at the Barbican Gallery in London, in California where she worked as a scenic artist on theatrical backdrops, Bedfordshire, and Wales, where she now lives. A recent commission was to paint the portrait of Liberal Member of Parliament Lembit Opik. The portrait is now hanging in the House of Commons.
1 comment:
Hola Maria
Yes, that is a good painting of Peter. Am I imagining it, or is there something mildly Spanish about the beard?
I have decided to form myself into a bank, as I could do with a few billion. If Gordon Brown would like to send me some money, he can rest assured that it will be used to free up the economy, especially my own econony, and that he, or his great-grandchildren, will get it back – eventually.
Robert
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