Russia 1905 Revolution (Original)

Russia 1905 Revolution art by Andrew Howat

Russia 1905 Revolution (Original)


£0.00
£190.00
In Stock

Artist: Andrew Howat
Medium: Gouache on Board
Size: 11" x 12" (280mm x 300mm)
Date: 1979
Code: Howat1905RevLL

This is the unique original Gouache painting by Andrew Howat.

Unidentified scene from Russian Revolution of 1905, with inset portrait of Tsar Nicholas II (top right). This is the original artwork. Bloody Sunday was a massacre on January 22 [O.S. January 9] 1905 in St. Petersburg, Russia, where unarmed, peaceful demonstrators marching to present a petition to Tsar Nicholas II were gunned down by the Imperial Guard.

The march was organized by Father Gapon, who had collaborated with Sergei Zubatov of the Okhrana, the Tsarist secret police, to create workers' organizations and thus considered by some to be its agent provocateur.

Bloody Sunday was an event with grave consequences for the Tsarist regime, as the disregard for ordinary people shown by the massacre undermined support for the state.
  • Artist Biography
    Andrew Howat (Born 1927; Hale, UK)
    Born in Hale, Cheshire, Howat studied life drawing, anatomy and painting at Manchester School of Art.

    Andrew Howat has contributed a wide variety of work to Look and Learn. In the late 1970s, he was one of the key artists providing features on the front and rear covers, including the miscellaneous strip 'Strange Facts' and episodes of the 'Land of Legend' and 'Crowning Glory' series.

    After his move to London he worked at a commercial studio before linking up with fellow artists Bob Robins and Gordon Davidson to produce illustrations for magazines and books. The trio often signed their work 'RDH'.

    Howat later worked for various London advertising agencies as well as freelancing as a designer of greetings cards. He continues to design cards featuring landscapes and views of London as well as to paint landscapes in watercolour and pastel around London and Hertfordshire.

    One of his paintings of the Palace of Westminster was used as a Christmas card by the House of Commons in 1999. He currently lives in north London.
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£0.00
£190.00
In Stock