THE career of renowned Cumbrian artist Julian Cooper is celebrated in a brand-new exhibition to mark his 70th birthday.

The award-winning Abbot Hall Art Gallery, in Kendal, will be showcasing 30 monumental paintings, acting as powerful concentration of his extensive output from 1970 to the present day.

The diversity of scale and subject matter in the show reflect the artist’s own travels – from the fells and mountains of the Lake District and Cumbria, to work inspired by his trips to South America, the Alps, the Himalayas, and the quarries of Tasmania and Carrara, Italy.


Julian Cooper at the Matterhorn summit Exhibition curator Kerri Offord says: "It’s exciting for Abbot Hall to be able to show the development of Julian’s distinct style, and his approach to the tradition of landscape painting over his career to date.

"His unique approach to the painting of mountains, and his ability to capture monumental subjects on both a large and small scale, makes this exhibition particularly fascinating."

The exhibition traces the evolution and development of Cooper’s art throughout his career. It starts with works that could be characterised as a form of abstraction with figurative elements, before continuing with figurative paintings that incorporate social, political, historical and literary devices. Cooper’s later work is frequently near-abstract in its emphasis on the texture, shadow and irregular surfaces of rock and ice.

In his more recent canvases, the artist has returned to the Cumbrian landscape and the relationship between rock, trees and vegetation.

Julian Cooper says: "This exhibition has provided me with hindsight, and I can see many strands in the earlier paintings done by my younger self emerge to the surface in different ways in later paintings.

"I find this reassuring, and will I’m sure influence my work in the future.”

Julian Cooper: Paintings from 1970 to 2017 opens at Abbot Hall Art Gallery on Friday April 7 and runs until Sunday July 2.

A full colour catalogue, featuring essays by writer, critic and curator Andrew Lambirth and Tate Curator Amy Concannon, is also available.

Abbot Hall is open from Monday to Saturday each week, from 10.30am to 4pm.