• Source: Brenda Chamberlain (artist)
  • Brenda Irene Chamberlain (17 March 1912 – 11 July 1971) was a Welsh artist, poet and writer. She won the first two Gold Medals awarded by the National Eisteddfod of Wales in the Fine Art category, for her paintings Girl with a Siamese Cat (1951) and The Cristin Children (1953), and her written works include Tide-race, a memoir of 15 years spent living on Bardsey Island. An expatriate on the island of Hydra, Greece, from 1961 to 1967, she then returned to Wales, where she died in 1971. Her papers are preserved by the National Library of Wales; examples of her artworks are found in several collections.


    Early life and education



    Chamberlain was born in Bangor, the daughter of Francis Thomas Chamberlain and Elsie Cooil Chamberlain. Her father worked for the railway. Her mother served a term on the Bangor Borough Council, and was later Mayor of Bangor during World War II.
    In 1931, Chamberlain began her studies as an artist at the Royal Academy Schools in London.


    Works


    Chamberlain ran the Caseg Press in Bethesda, Wales, with her then-husband the artist John Petts, and the poet Alun Lewis. The collective produced postcards and bookplates, for which Chamberlain made woodcuts. Caseg Broadsheets featured poetry by Chamberlain and others. The cottage they shared, Ty'r Mynydd, bears a plaque commemorating their work.
    Chamberlain also produced prose works, including Tide-Race (1962), a memoir of life at Carreg, Bardsey Island, where she lived and worked from 1947 until 1962. The publication of Tide-Race coincided with a solo exhibition of Chamberlain's paintings at the Zwemmer Gallery in London.
    Chamberlain won the first two Gold Medals awarded by the National Eisteddfod of Wales for Fine Art, in 1951 for the painting Girl with a Siamese Cat and in 1953 for The Cristin Children.
    In 1961 Chamberlain went to live on the Greek island of Hydra, but returned to Wales in 1967. Her novel A Rope of Vines draws from her time in Hydra, while her play The Protagonists (published 2013, first performed 1968) details the 1967 right-wing coup which led to the Greek junta.


    Legacy


    There are artworks by Chamberlain in the National Museum Wales, National Library of Wales, Bangor University, Cyfarthfa Castle and Royal Holloway, University of London. There is a collection of her papers, including sketches, letters, poems, photographs, diaries, and unpublished works, in the National Library of Wales.
    Kate Holman published an academic biography of Brenda Chamberlain in 1997. Jill Piercy published another biography of Chamberlain in 2013.


    Personal life


    Before the Second World War, Chamberlain moved in with the artist John Petts. They married in 1935, and in 1936 they moved to Rachub, a village near Bethesda. The cottage they shared, Ty'r Mynydd, bears a plaque commemorating their work. The couple were divorced in 1944.
    Chamberlain died in 1971, age 59, in Bangor, after an overdose of sedatives. Her remains were interred at Glanadda Cemetery in Bangor.


    Published works


    The Green Heart (1958)
    Tide-Race (1962) (ISBN 9780907476658)
    The Water Castle (1964) (ISBN 978-1908069795)
    A Rope of Vines (1965) (ISBN 9781905762866)
    Poems with Drawings (1969) (ISBN 0901111066)


    Further reading


    Alun Lewis and the Making of the Caseg Broadsheets, 1969 (ISBN 9780901111074)
    Kate Holman, Brenda Chamberlain, 1997 (ISBN 9780708310489)
    Jill Piercy, Brenda Chamberlain, Artist & Writer, 2013 (ISBN 9781906998233)


    References




    External links



    18 artworks by or after Brenda Chamberlain at the Art UK site
    "Fonds GB 0210 MSBREAIN – Brenda Chamberlain manuscripts". – archive held at the National Library of Wales

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