early life and education
frank barrington craig, also known as
barry craig, was a british painter of portraits and landscapes, born on march 2, 1902, in hampstead, north london. he came from a family of artists, with his father being the artist
frank craig. craig was educated at rugby school and later studied at the
slade school of art between 1919 and 1924.
career highlights
craig's artistic career took him to south africa, where he worked as a professor of painting at the
michaelis school of fine art in cape town from 1926 to 1933. upon returning to britain, he taught at
saint martin's school of art in london until 1950. during world war ii, craig undertook camouflage work for the british government and was commissioned by the
war artists advisory committee (waac) to paint portraits of a fire-guarding team based in weston-super-mare.
artistic style and exhibitions
craig often painted landscapes in provence and brittany, with an example held in the
uk government art collection. he exhibited regularly with the
new english art club from 1946 and had exhibitions at the
goupil gallery and the
cooling galleries. craig's work was also showcased at the
royal academy.
legacy
craig died in chelsea on february 4, 1951. a retrospective exhibition of his work was held in 1987 at the
new art centre. today, you can explore craig's artwork and other british painters on
WahooArt.com, which offers a wide range of art pieces, including museum reproductions and paintings from photos.
important: explore the
uk government art collection and other british art collections on WahooArt.com.