Ken Kiff RA

£3,400.00

Woman, Wave and Flower

  • Woodcut on Bunkoshi paper                                                                        

  • Dimensions: 101cm x 78cm

  • Provenance: Artists Family

KEN KIFF R.A 1935 – 2001 

Kiff grew up in England during the second world war and was deeply impacted by the death of his father when he was only six years old, the effects of which would remain present throughout his life and art. He trained at the Hornsey School of Art (1955-61) and went on to teach at Chelsea School of Art and the Royal College of Art, where over thirty years he influenced generations of artists. Kiff gained prominence in the 1980s, he was elected Royal Academician in 1991 and he was Associate Artist in Residence at the National Gallery 1991-1993. Although recognized during his lifetime, he carved a solitary path, maintaining a commitment to the pictorial and symbolic values of modernism at a time when Abstract Expressionism and Pop Art dominated. In recent years there has been a renewed interest in his work in the context of contemporary figurative painting, with many younger artists turning to Kiff’s work for inspiration.  

Primarily a painter, Kiff pursued the formal qualities of painting – of shape, line, texture, transparency and colour. He melded figuration and abstraction. In the 1980s his practice expanded to include most forms of printmaking – including woodcuts, monotypes, lithographs and etchings – collaborating with master printmakers across the UK, Europe and the US. Kiff would often work on paintings over a number of years, so the immediacy and materiality of printmaking allowed for a different kind of expressive freedom. 

The natural world is of great importance throughout Kiff’s work; trees, the sun, clouds, flowers, hills, bodies of water feature as do animals often interacting with figures.  
Kiff had important solo exhibitions at Talbot Rice Art Centre, Edinburgh (1981), Serpentine Gallery, London (1986) and Arnolfini Gallery, Bristol (1986). He was included in the artist and curator Timothy Hyman’s seminal touring exhibition
Narrative Paintings in 1979. Recently The Sequence was the focus of a major exhibition at the Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts, Norwich (2018-2019).  

Kiff’s works are included in important collections such as: The Arts Council England, UK; The British Museum, UK; Royal Academy of Arts, UK; Tate, UK; Gothenburg Museum of Art, Sweden; The Cleveland Museum of Art, OH, US; The Metropolitan Museum of Art, NY, USA; The Museum of Modern Art, NY, USA and many others. 

Woman, Wave and Flower

  • Woodcut on Bunkoshi paper                                                                        

  • Dimensions: 101cm x 78cm

  • Provenance: Artists Family

KEN KIFF R.A 1935 – 2001 

Kiff grew up in England during the second world war and was deeply impacted by the death of his father when he was only six years old, the effects of which would remain present throughout his life and art. He trained at the Hornsey School of Art (1955-61) and went on to teach at Chelsea School of Art and the Royal College of Art, where over thirty years he influenced generations of artists. Kiff gained prominence in the 1980s, he was elected Royal Academician in 1991 and he was Associate Artist in Residence at the National Gallery 1991-1993. Although recognized during his lifetime, he carved a solitary path, maintaining a commitment to the pictorial and symbolic values of modernism at a time when Abstract Expressionism and Pop Art dominated. In recent years there has been a renewed interest in his work in the context of contemporary figurative painting, with many younger artists turning to Kiff’s work for inspiration.  

Primarily a painter, Kiff pursued the formal qualities of painting – of shape, line, texture, transparency and colour. He melded figuration and abstraction. In the 1980s his practice expanded to include most forms of printmaking – including woodcuts, monotypes, lithographs and etchings – collaborating with master printmakers across the UK, Europe and the US. Kiff would often work on paintings over a number of years, so the immediacy and materiality of printmaking allowed for a different kind of expressive freedom. 

The natural world is of great importance throughout Kiff’s work; trees, the sun, clouds, flowers, hills, bodies of water feature as do animals often interacting with figures.  
Kiff had important solo exhibitions at Talbot Rice Art Centre, Edinburgh (1981), Serpentine Gallery, London (1986) and Arnolfini Gallery, Bristol (1986). He was included in the artist and curator Timothy Hyman’s seminal touring exhibition
Narrative Paintings in 1979. Recently The Sequence was the focus of a major exhibition at the Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts, Norwich (2018-2019).  

Kiff’s works are included in important collections such as: The Arts Council England, UK; The British Museum, UK; Royal Academy of Arts, UK; Tate, UK; Gothenburg Museum of Art, Sweden; The Cleveland Museum of Art, OH, US; The Metropolitan Museum of Art, NY, USA; The Museum of Modern Art, NY, USA and many others.