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About Brenda Barratt
At the age of 8, I won an art competition for a poster I had created for Essex County Council with a picture of a toad leaping across the road with a policeman standing nearby looking very cross. It said “don’t be like this naughty toad, look before you cross the road!” I won the school art club and then on leaving school I became a fashion model for a while. However, on finding it very hard work changing clothes every five minutes, I was sent to secretarial college. Some years later the terrible storm came and I was so upset to see Buxted Park devastated, I went there with my paper and pencil and frantically started pencilling in what it used to look like before all the trees came down. I took this picture when finished to my father, who stroked his chin and commented, “Well if you really want to paint, then I had better show you how properly!” The rest is history. My son, Oliver also has a natural bent for art and so to raise funds for Great Ormond Street when he fell ill, we had a “Three Generations of Art” exhibition in Uckfield. We were quite stunned at the level of interest and support. A lad of 10, me and my father who was in his 70s then - great fun and we sold out in a few days.
With schools and colleges, I began with painting Oliver’s school, Hurstpierpoint College. I painted the school for friends and then one day someone suggested I made a limited print run. This created the base of my business. I have now undertaken 25 schools and colleges. I paint an original of the school and donate it to the head teacher and then have prints made and sell them to the pupils, staff and alumni. My most recent news is that my painting of Cranbrook School in Kent was taken up into space by Piers Sellers, the famous UK astronaut, an ex pupil of Cranbrook. This occurred mid-May 2010 and was the last space shuttle flight to take place before the fleet retires for ever. In March 2011 Dr Sellers returned to his old school with my painting bearing his signature authenticating its 5 million miles of space travel at a speed of 18,000 mph. The painting was carried in a compartment beneath the space shuttle's floor and is thought to be the first original watercolour to have travelled into space and back. |
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