[]
Your ongoing selection
Asset(s) Assets
Your quote 0

Your selection

Clear selection
{"event":"pageview","page_type1":"news","page_type2":"news_case_studies","language":"en","user_logged":"false","user_type":"ecommerce","nl_subscriber":"false"}

Ron Waddams - Artist Spotlight

Ron Waddams was a Chiswick-born visual artist primarily inspired by the abstract expressionist movement of the 1950s. His works focus on themes of nature, peace, community and spirituality. 

 

Ron Waddams was born in 1920 at Chiswick. He spent his childhood in Shepherd's Bush where he attended elementary school. In 1933, he moved with his parents to West Twyford, and a year later he gained a place at Ealing School of Art where he came top of the Junior Art Department. By 1937 he was working in a London commercial art studio.

 

Click here to view all work in the archive by Ron Waddams.

 

Peace Quintet (4) Gentleness, 1991 (acrylic on board), Ron Waddams (1920-2010) © Ron Waddams. All rights reserved 2022 / Bridgeman Images
Peace Quintet (4) Gentleness, 1991 (acrylic on board), Ron Waddams (1920-2010) © Ron Waddams. All rights reserved 2022 / Bridgeman Images

 

Fruits of the earth, 1973 (acrylic on board), Ron Waddams (1920-2010) / Private Collection / © Ron Waddams. All rights reserved 2022 / Bridgeman Images
Fruits of the earth, 1973 (acrylic on board), Ron Waddams (1920-2010) / Private Collection / © Ron Waddams. All rights reserved 2022 / Bridgeman Images

 

From 1940 to 1946 he was called up for military action and served without distinction in Britain, India and Burma. After demobilisation and a period of readjustment, he returned to work as a freelance commercial artist.

 

Primary planet, 2004 (acrylic on board), Ron Waddams (1920-2010) / Private Collection / © Ron Waddams. All rights reserved 2022 / Bridgeman Images
Primary planet, 2004 (acrylic on board), Ron Waddams (1920-2010) / Private Collection / © Ron Waddams. All rights reserved 2022 / Bridgeman Images

 

Jordans Quaker Meeting (1) (acrylic on board), Ron Waddams (1920-2010) / Private Collection / © Ron Waddams. All rights reserved 2022 / Bridgeman Images
Jordans Quaker Meeting (1) (acrylic on board), Ron Waddams (1920-2010) / Private Collection / © Ron Waddams. All rights reserved 2022 / Bridgeman Images

 

By 1967, then well established as a graphic designer and married with three children, he wished to use the skills he had to make artwork about the values and concerns he held. This he did in his spare time between commercial commitments. Ron had attended Quaker meetings for worship for many years and was accepted into membership in 1978. He gave up self-employed work in 1985, which allowed him to continue painting full-time. 

 

Herto man,2003  Ron Waddams All rights reserved 2022 Bridgeman Images
Herto man,2003  Ron Waddams All rights reserved 2022 Bridgeman Images

 

Messengers of Truth, 1987 (acrylic on board), Ron Waddams (1920-2010) / Private Collection / © Ron Waddams. All rights reserved 2022 / Bridgeman Images
Messengers of Truth, 1987 (acrylic on board), Ron Waddams (1920-2010) / Private Collection / © Ron Waddams. All rights reserved 2022 / Bridgeman Images

 

The primary and foremost visual element of much of Waddams' work evokes the Abstract Expressionist movement of the 1950s. Through geometric, abstracted and often minimalist forms, Waddams' art speaks to themes such as community, peace, organic nature and spirituality, all popular themes in the Expressionist art of the 1950s.

 

Oneness of creation, 2002 (acrylic on board), Ron Waddams (1920-2010) / Private Collection / © Ron Waddams. All rights reserved 2022 / Bridgeman Images
Oneness of creation, 2002 (acrylic on board), Ron Waddams (1920-2010) / Private Collection / © Ron Waddams. All rights reserved 2022 / Bridgeman Images

 

One-world human race, 2005 (acrylic on board), Ron Waddams (1920-2010) / Private Collection / © Ron Waddams. All rights reserved 2022 / Bridgeman Images
One-world human race, 2005 (acrylic on board), Ron Waddams (1920-2010) / Private Collection / © Ron Waddams. All rights reserved 2022 / Bridgeman Images

 

The first public exhibition of Waddams' work was at Jordans Friends Meeting House in 1997. Ron Waddams died on 18 September 2010 peacefully and at home. He was of the same generation of artists as Ryno Frieberg, Manuel Bennett, Roger Sprunger, Rene Charles Acht and Anthony La Rocco.

Click here to view all work in the archive by Ron Waddams.

 

Contact our sales team for enquiries about licensing images and clearing copyright. 

 

Related Content

Looking for ideas to illustrate new projects within your budget? Here is a selection of artists who died in 1953, and whose copyright in Europe expired on 31 December 2023.
Bridgeman Images is proud to represent the Archive of the Israel Museum, a beacon of art, history, and archaeology.
Victoria Ginn is a fine art photographer born in New Zealand. Her work explores individuality, landscape, and culture. Let's find out more about her striking work with our interview.