The North West Frontier (Original)
Medium: Watercolour on Board
Size: 9" x 6" (220mm x 160mm)
Date: 1970
Code: LinklaterAssassinLL
This is the unique original Watercolour painting by Barrie Linklater.
An Indian soldier named Mazer Ali saves General Roberts from an Afghan knife near Kabul in 1879. A dramatic moment in the tense history of the North West Frontier.
From Look and Learn issue 437 published 30th May 1970.
- Artist BiographyBarrie Linklater (born 1931; Birmingham, UK)
Born in Birmingham, Warwickshire, in 1931, Barrie Linklater studied at Woolwich Polytechnic School of Art and began his artistic career working in a London studio before leaving for Australia where he worked as a freelance for four years.
Returning to London, Linklater forged a reputation as a fine portrait artist and subsequently as an equestrian artist, his first commission in the latter area coming from HRH the Duke of Edinburgh during a sitting for a portrait in 1975. Equestrian work has since been commissioned by Her Majesty The Queen and the City of London amongst many others. In all he has 13 paintings in the Royal Collection and his work has been exhibited at the National Portrait Gallery. Linklater lives and works in Berkshire.
In the 1960s, Linklater contributed illustrations to Look and Learn's adaptation of H. G. Wells' The First Men in the Moon in 1963 and later, in 1967, began producing covers and illustrations on a semi-regular basis.
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