Bertram Nicholls PRICE CHARTS
1883 - 1974. Known for: Painting.
Bertram Nicholls (1883 – 1974) was a prodigious producer of landscape paintings, with a focus on important archaic buildings, architectural ruins and stone bridges. He was extremely successful in the... Read full biography
Bertram Nicholls (1883 – 1974) was a prodigious producer of landscape paintings, with a focus on important archaic buildings, architectural ruins and stone bridges. He was extremely successful in the early 20th century and highly regarded by his peers who included Walter Ricketts, Frank Brangwyn... Read full biography
Bertram Nicholls (1883 – 1974) was a prodigious producer of landscape paintings, with a focus on important archaic buildings, architectural ruins and stone bridges. He was extremely successful in the early 20th century and highly regarded by his peers who included Walter Ricketts, Frank Brangwyn and Russell Flint. He became president of the Royal Society of Artists in 1931. Nicholls exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1912 and from 1923-34 he was elected president of the Manchester Academy of... Read full biography
Bertram Nicholls (1883 – 1974) was a prodigious producer of landscape paintings, with a focus on important archaic buildings, architectural ruins and stone bridges. He was extremely successful in the early 20th century and highly regarded by his peers who included Walter Ricketts, Frank Brangwyn and Russell Flint. He became president of the Royal Society of Artists in 1931. Nicholls exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1912 and from 1923-34 he was elected president of the Manchester Academy of Fine Arts. His first solo exhibition (a sell-out) was held at Barbizon House in 1924. His work is represented in the Royal Academy, the Tate and the Victoria and Albert Museum, and is also held in major British, American and Commonwealth collections,... Read full biography
Bertram Nicholls (1883 – 1974) was a prodigious producer of landscape paintings, with a focus on important archaic buildings, architectural ruins and stone bridges. He was extremely successful in the early 20th century and highly regarded by his peers who included Walter Ricketts, Frank Brangwyn and Russell Flint. He became president of the Royal Society of Artists in 1931. Nicholls exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1912 and from 1923-34 he was elected president of the Manchester Academy of Fine Arts. His first solo exhibition (a sell-out) was held at Barbizon House in 1924. His work is represented in the Royal Academy, the Tate and the Victoria and Albert Museum, and is also held in major British, American and Commonwealth collections, including a work on paper, Gateway at Orvieto, in the IZIKO South African National Gallery’s Sir Edmund a... Read full biography

