
Copyright © 2008-


Wilfrid R. Wood
A Spanish Roofscape
The Painting
A watercolour measuring 9½" x 13½".
Signed Wilfrid R. Wood.
About the Artist
Wilfrid Rene Wood (1888-

During his career he painted in almost every country in Europe, as well as venturing into Africa and Russia. In 1924 he staged his first major London exhibition at Walker’s Galleries, New Bond Street, showing paintings of East Anglia and Venice. Queen Mary was sufficiently impressed to purchase several watercolours of Venice. In 1927 he produced a series of posters on Kew Gardens for London Underground. In the same year he began a series of town exhibitions, starting at Oxford and continuing at Norwich, Cambridge and Tenby. His paintings and prints expressed a sensitive insight into the beauty of English towns. In 1937 Wilfrid moved to Stamford in Lincolnshire, having accepted a commission to record the buildings and street scenes of the town before the threat of imminent change. He lived with his wife Joan, also a professional artist, at Barnack. His first exhibition in Stamford was held at the end of 1937, and he continued to paint scenes of the town for many years. In the late 1930s and 1940s he was also commissioned to paint the vanishing street scenes of Peterborough, where whole sections of the old city were being demolished to make way for progress. In later life Wilfrid served as President of the Welland Valley Art Society, founded in 1945. His name lives on in the Wilfrid Wood Gallery at Stamford Arts Centre. A large permanent collection of his works is held by Peterborough Museum and Art Gallery and Peterborough Cathedral.
The Subject
A Spanish Roofscape.