Jeff Stultiens
(1944–2023) was a British portrait artist born in Blackpool. He grew up in an
artistic household: his father, Thomas Stultiens (1903–1965), and his mother, Kate Stultiens,
née Whittaker (1907–1980), were both artists who strongly influenced his early
interest in painting. Carrying forward this creative legacy, Stultiens studied
at the Camberwell School of Art in the 1960s under the guidance of R. B. Kitaj.
In 1991 he was elected to the Royal Society of Portrait Painters, and his works
are now held in the National Portrait Gallery, Oriel College (Oxford), Girton
College (Cambridge), the Royal Society, the Royal College of Physicians, and
the Royal Academy of Music, among others.
One of Stultiens’
most celebrated works is his portrait of Queen Elizabeth II, painted in 2003 to
mark her Golden Jubilee. Commissioned by Oriel College, the 2.3-meter-high
canvas shows the Queen in garter robes and was based on six sittings at
Buckingham Palace. He painted other significant figures, including Cardinal
Basil Hume, further establishing his reputation as one of Britain’s foremost
portraitists.
I have a number of
artworks from the studio of Jeff Stultiens, including life drawings by Jeff
Stultiens, as well as drawings, paintings, and printmaking by his parents,
Thomas and Kate Stultiens. This listing is for two papers, as
detailed below.
Fine woodcut on thin laid paper depicting a market scene with a figure selling balloons circa mid 20th century, unsigned. Together with the same image etched into scrapper board. The woodcut is in reasonable condition with light age toning, light handling, a couple of small hole to the margins and other minor printing marks / blemishes. the scrapper board has several creases with the board surface broken to these areas and other marks / blemishes / wear to board margins.
Whereas Thomas Stultiens was a talented landscape painter and Jeff Stultiens a gifted portrait artist, Kate seemed to specialize more in botanical work and printmaking. This piece comes from a portfolio of her work, with a number of papers being signed. They are listed individually on the shop home page, under the category 'Kate Stultiens, nee Whittaker'
Woodcut measures 15.2cm x 10cm. Total paper size 19.4cm x 13.5cm.
Scrapper board measures 17.2cm x 12.5cm