Artist’s show brings £20000 charity lift

Suffolk artist Maggi Hambling has helped raise more than £20,000 for two charities by an exhibition of her latest works in the home of a friend – fine art dealer David Case.

Twenty three of her paintings – impressions of North Sea waves – were sold at the exhibition which was staged in the Old Rectory at Brockdish. An illustrated talk by the artist about her life and work also attracted a sell-out audience in the village hall.

Half the money raised will go to a trust set up in memory of Mr Case’s daughter, Laura, who was killed in a road accident in Uganda where she was working as a medical student. The other half will go to the parish church in the family’s home village of Brockdish.

The Laura Case Trust is primarily aimed at helping to improve medical care in Uganda and elsewhere in Africa.

Mr Case said: “I had hoped we might raise £5,000 but in the event we raised more than £20,000. All the buyers were local and not Maggi’s collectors.”

Prior to the exhibition and talk, about £25,000 had been raised for the trust by events and donations for the charity and 80 per cent had been spent in Africa. Part of the money had gone on shipping 20 medical beds to the hospital in Kisiizi where Laura had been working at the time of her death.

“Beds are a scarce resource in rural hospitals in Africa. The lack of such a simple piece of equipment was one of the things that Laura was most aware of while she worked there,” Mr Case said.

The charity was also helping a project aimed at training police officers and taxi drivers to be paramedics – because of the shortage of ambulances in Africa – and to fund the training of a medical student aiming to work in a remote rural area in Uganda.

Mr Case has known Ms Hambling for many years and previously displayed her work at four major exhibitions at the Marlborough Gallery in London.

He said: “The exhibition comprised new oil paintings and Maggi’s first small acrylics on paper, where the waves become jewel-like in their intensity, and in their concentration of energy and colour.

The artist, best known for her controversial Scallop sculpture on Aldeburgh beach, told the audience in Brockdish Village hall that she went down to the beach at Aldeburgh or Sizewell early each morning to sketch – trying to capture the motion of the waves.

Maggi Hambling ‘North Sea Waves’

Maggi Hambling ‘North Sea Waves’

An exhibition of new paintings on paper

The Old Rectory, Brockdish, Norfolk, IP21 4JJ

Saturday 11th – Sunday 19 October – 2pm to 6pm or by appointment

The celebrated East Anglian artist, Maggi Hambling, is one of the most distinctive artists of her generation – a restless artistic spirit who is equally at home painting George Melly for the National Portrait Gallery or making sculptures using cans of Special Brew. 

In recent years her attention has turned to the coast near her house in Suffolk; her most famous and contentious work being the striking and monumental sculpture ‘Scallop’ on Aldeburgh beach. 

The restless movement of the sea has become an obsession for Hambling and all paintings start with her daily ritual. ‘Early each morning I go down to the sea and try to capture its mood by drawing, and each day is different. Back in the studio, these drawings become paintings. Whether they are tiny or cover the studio wall, I try to make the movement of the waves happen in the paint’.

The exhibition will comprise new oil paintings and her first small, acrylics on paper, where the waves become jewel-like in their intensity, and in their concentration of energy and colour. 

Most works will be for sale with prices starting at £1,000 – very reasonable given Hambling’s current prices. 

An extra bonus will be an illustrated talk by Maggi, in her inimitable, highly entertaining and occasionally scurrilous style, based on her autobiography ‘Maggi Hambling: The Works’ at Brockdish Village hall on Monday 13th October at 8pm, preceded by a private view at the Rectory from 6pm. Tickets are limited and are £7 each. 

The exhibition is for charity and all profits will be shared between The Laura Case Trust, a medical charity, and Brockdish Church.(Laura is the daughter of David and Anthea Case of Brockdish who was killed in Uganda last year while working as a medical student in a hospital there.) We are very grateful to Maggi and her Marlborough Fine Art, her London gallery, for all their help and encouragement in organising this exhibition

For information on the exhibition and talk, contact David Case at davidcasefineart@btinternet.com, or 01379 668875. Details of the exhibition and all images will also be on www.davidcasefineart.com.

David Case, David Case Fine Art, The Old Rectory, Church Road, Brockdish, Diss, Norfolk IP21 4JJ