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Life of Newlyn/St Ives artist famed for his paintings of animals
and birds.
Geoffrey Garnier was the only Newlyn artist to devote himself
entirely to the art of print-making. After a spell in Canada he
studied at the Bushey School of Art and in 1913 at the Forbes
School of Art at Newlyn in Cornwall. Friends there included Lamorna
Birch, Laura and Harold Knight, Charles and Ruth Simpson, Harold
Harvey, his wife Gertrude and her sister Sophie Bodinnar, Frank
Dobson the sculptor, Dod and Ernest Procter and A J Munnings and
wife Florence. Geoffrey and Jill, coinciding at the Forbes School,
married in 1917 while he was serving in the Navy, and after the war
settled in Newlyn, where they remained for the rest of their lives.
They bought Orchard Cottage, high above the harbour with glorious
views across the bay to St Michael's Mount, building studios in the
sloping garden. Geoffrey's prints gained international recognition.
He worked in dry-point, line engraving, etching, mezzotint and
particularly aquatint, developing new processes and rediscovering
old methods. Favourite subjects were the sailing ships of the great
era of British sea power, Cornish landscapes and sporting scenes,
charming studies of children at play and colourful oriental prints.
Jill continued to paint despite the demands of domesticity, and
produced portraits of her children and friends, landscapes and
still lifes, making a record of her times. Geoffrey's versatility
extended to calligraphy, bookbinding and fiction writing. Despite
his nostalgia for old Cornish life, he had a love of fast cars,
owning such exotic makes as Benz, Delage and Austro-Daimler.
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