Bernard Cheese

Bernard Cheese

1925 - 2013

Trained at Beckenham School of Art and attended Royal College of Art from 1947 to 1950 where he studied under Edward Bawden, John Nash and Edwin La Dell. Taught printmaking at St. Martin's and Central Schools of Art and became Senior Lecturer at Goldsmiths' College, London. Became interested in lithography, his favourite printing medium. Has a delicate use of colour which shows the influence of his work with water-colour, another of his preferred mediums. Delights in patterns found in landscapes, whether in vineyards of Provence or on the hillside of north Yorkshire.

Bernard Cheese obituary
Painter and printmaker whose work expressed a deep fascination for landscape and daily life

The Guardian, Sunday 31 March 2013 17.09 BST
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Bernard Cheese, who has died aged 88, was a quiet observer of everyday life. Sketching among the rocky inlets of the Pembrokeshire coast, exploring the North Yorkshire moors and looking out over the vineyards of Provence, he expressed a fascination with landscape and the patterns imposed by man on to nature. A keen draughtsman, he sought out interesting vernacular architecture as subjects for his lively watercolours and lithographs. He painted thatched farmhouses in Essex, fishermen's cottages nestled between quay and hillside at Staithes, in Yorkshire, and the sun-baked medieval hill town of Le Barroux in southern France. But Cheese was also a storyteller. Look closely at his prints and observe a community that goes about its daily business. Women chatter at a street corner, children play games, farmers tend their livestock and seafarers repair their vessels.
Cheese was born in Sydenham, south-east London, and trained at Beckenham School of Art. After four years in the army, he enrolled at the Royal College of Art in 1947. There, Cheese's enthusiasm for lithography was fired by Edwin La Dell. Together with the master printer George Devenish, La Dell had set up a lithographic workshop modelled on Parisian ateliers. La Dell encouraged Cheese to go out into the streets to record London life in the markets, pubs and parks and to mingle with the crowd, sketchbook in hand, and observe. Over eight decades, Cheese became an enthusiastic observer of British society.
Bernard Cheese at St Martin's School of Art in the late 1950s. Photograph: Aberystwyth University
At the Royal College, Cheese met a fellow student, Sheila Robinson, the Nottinghamshire-born printmaker and illustrator. They married in 1951 and set up home in Beaufort Street, Chelsea. Both artists worked on Festival of Britain murals alongside their art-school tutor and close friend Edward Bawden. Their first child, Chloe, now a celebrated artist in her own right, was born in 1952. Bawden introduced the couple to Great Bardfield, a village in Essex. In 1953, they moved to Bardfield End Green at Thaxted, where their son, Benjamin, was born the following year. Cheese established his studio at a former fish and chip shop in Great Bardfield. Both he and his wife taught printmaking at London art schools: Cheese at St Martin's School of Art (1950-68) and Robinson at the Royal College.
Great Bardfield was a quintessentially English village – a thriving community with butcher, ironmonger, grocer and, remarkably, a close gathering of artists who, by design or happy coincidence, lived and worked in or around the village. The Cheeses would soon enjoy their friendship and support, contributing to regular "open house" exhibitions. Among their artist neighbours were Edward and Charlotte Bawden, John Aldridge, George and Kate Chapman, Michael and Duffy Rothenstein, and the textile designer Marianne Straub.
In 1957, Bernard and Sheila separated. The following year they were divorced and Bernard married his former student Brenda Latham Brown. They moved to nearby Stisted, where their daughters, Joanna and Sarah, were born. For a studio, Cheese rented a Sunday school room. The 1950s and 60s saw great innovation nd diversity in British printmaking. Lithography had become the favoured medium of the younger generation and there were more opportunities to publish and exhibit prints. Cheese was now showing as far afield as Beijing (1956), Stockholm (1960), Washington DC (1962) and New York (1968).
A regular exhibitor of fine art prints, he also worked on commissions for poster designs and illustration. In 1951, London Transport commissioned the first of several posters, Pantomimes and Circuses. La Dell asked him to contribute to Coronation Lithographs, a portfolio of 40 prints by staff and former students of the Royal College for a celebratory exhibition at the Redfern Gallery in 1953. The brewers Guinness – seeking to establish a market for unsigned lithographs for display in pubs – commissioned A Fisherman's Story in 1956. Choosing his subject from the Guinness Book of Records, Cheese shows a contented fisherman on a bar stool, arms outstretched, a half-empty glass of ale in one hand, pipe in the other, boasting of his day's catch to the barman and all in earshot. Other clients ranged from the BBC and A&C Black to P&O Cruises.

After leaving St Martin's, Cheese was appointed senior lecturer at Goldsmiths College (1970-78) and taught part-time at Central School of Art and Design, London (1980-89). He and Brenda separated in 1988 and divorced in 1992. Cheese then settled in Nayland, north of Colchester. While he continued to travel in search of new subjects for watercolours that he subsequently reworked as lithographs, he turned increasingly to delightfully idiosyncratic still-life arrangements such as Trout on a Plate and Victoria Plums and English Coxs. Though Cheese's work often comes across as whimsical, his seemingly light-hearted touch is rooted in sound draughtsmanship and a well-structured composition.
In later years there were numerous invitations to stage solo exhibitions. His works were acquired by many important collections, from the Victoria and Albert Museum and the Royal Collection to the Museum of Modern Art in New York and New York Public Library. With more than 100 lithographs and watercolours, Aberystwyth University holds the largest public collection of his works. However, accolades were long overdue. Cheese was not elected a fellow of the Royal Society of Painter-Printmakers until 1988, more than 40 years after he made his first print.
Cheese was predeceased by Ben. He is survived by Chloe, Joanna and Sarah.
• Bernard Cheese, painter and printmaker, born 20 January 1925; died 15 March 2013