David Gentleman, UK

AGI member since 1972

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David Gentleman, the son of artists, studied at the Royal College of Art from 1950–53. His early commissions ranged widely: engravings for books and press ads, drawings for newspapers and magazines, designs for fabrics and wallpapers, watercolours for Shell, illustrations for New York limited editions and for Penguin and Faber paper backs. In 1962 the Post Office issued the first of his hundred postage stamps. In the seventies he made many lithographs, designed and took the photographs for a series of environmental posters for the National Trust. The eighties and nineties were largely taken up with his most extended work, writing and illustrating David Gentleman’s Britain and five subsequent books about London, the coastline, Paris, India and Italy. Since then he has made litho graphs of Suffolk, painted watercolours of London, Brazil and India, and designed coins for the Royal Mint and placards protesting against the Iraq War. He was elected a Royal Designer for Industry in 1970.

Design work by David Gentleman


    David Gentleman, UK (1972)

    David Gentleman, the son of artists, studied at the Royal College of Art from 1950–53. His early commissions ranged widely: engravings for books and press ads, drawings for newspapers and...

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    David Gentleman, UK (1972)

    David Gentleman, the son of artists, studied at the Royal College of Art from 1950–53. His early commissions ranged widely: engravings for books and press ads, drawings for newspapers and magazines, designs for fabrics and wallpapers, watercolours for Shell, illustrations for New York limited editions and for Penguin and Faber paper backs. In 1962 the Post Office issued the first of his hundred postage stamps. In the seventies he made many lithographs, designed and took the photographs for a series of environmental posters for the National Trust. The eighties and nineties were largely taken up with his most extended work, writing and illustrating David Gentleman’s Britain and five subsequent books about London, the coastline, Paris, India and Italy. Since then he has made litho graphs of Suffolk, painted watercolours of London, Brazil and India, and designed coins for the Royal Mint and placards protesting against the Iraq War. He was elected a Royal Designer for Industry in 1970.