Paul Braddon VERY LARGE Original Watercolour Jewellery Quarter Birmingham City.

A view from St Pauls Rd Birmingham overlooking St Pauls church in the now Jewellery Quarter

Antique Circa 1900

What a difference 120 years has made to this ever changing city.
 
Hugely important piece by respected and listed Birmingham artist Paul Braddon
This original framed and glazed watercolour is a massive 1450mm x 900mm painting size with a 75mm frame around bringing it to 1600mm x 1050mm in total, it is a whopper and certainly the largest I've seen or even heard of from Paul Braddon.

This painting, as with all of Pauls work is meticulously detailed throughout, from the inner city pub through to the church and into the countryside beyond, it is a beauty and should be hanging in Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery to be honest, I can't afford to donate such a expensive item to them but if you can then all the good to you.

Collection only from Stratford Upon Avon
Postage? Courier organised by buyer.

Paul Braddon (1864–1937) was an English artist who predominantly painted landscape scenes in the watercolour medium. He was influenced by the work of Paul Marny

Life and work

Paul Braddon was the pseudonym of James Leslie Crees. He was born at 46, Ledsam Street in Birmingham on 10 July 1864.In his early years he created architectural drawings of continental cathedrals and churches. Later he abandoned this style in favour of the watercolours for which he is best known. He made pencil sketches of buildings and scenes, carefully annotated, from which he produced the eventual watercolours. His output was prolific, as it needed to be in order for him to earn a living. For several years he painted exclusively for a London firm which sold many of his pictures in the United States. He died aged 73 on 24 July 1937 in Thornton heath, Croydon, Surrey, and was buried on 24 July 1937 in Addington, Surrey..

Exhibitions and collections

Paul Braddon's work can be found in a number of museums and art galleries worldwide including Birmingham museum and art gallery Shrewsbury Museum, Edinburgh Museum and Art Gallery, Inverclyde Museum, Bronte Museum, and Blackburn Grammar School