Peter Coker PRICE CHARTS
1926 - 2004. Known for: Painting.
Obituary. The Telegraph, Dec. 18, 2004. Peter Coker, who has died aged 78, was one of the leading realist painters of his generation and an important figure in the post-war movement that the critics... Read full biography
Obituary. The Telegraph, Dec. 18, 2004. Peter Coker, who has died aged 78, was one of the leading realist painters of his generation and an important figure in the post-war movement that the critics christened, not altogether accurately, the Kitchen Sink School. While John Bratby, Jack Smith and Ed... Read full biography
Obituary. The Telegraph, Dec. 18, 2004. Peter Coker, who has died aged 78, was one of the leading realist painters of his generation and an important figure in the post-war movement that the critics christened, not altogether accurately, the Kitchen Sink School. While John Bratby, Jack Smith and Ed Middleditch are among the more familiar names of the movement, Coker's first one-man show at Zwemmers in 1956 - featuring large, obsessive and fiercely-painted scenes of animal carcasses in a... Read full biography
Obituary. The Telegraph, Dec. 18, 2004. Peter Coker, who has died aged 78, was one of the leading realist painters of his generation and an important figure in the post-war movement that the critics christened, not altogether accurately, the Kitchen Sink School. While John Bratby, Jack Smith and Ed Middleditch are among the more familiar names of the movement, Coker's first one-man show at Zwemmers in 1956 - featuring large, obsessive and fiercely-painted scenes of animal carcasses in a butcher's shop - created no less of a critical stir at the time. With work purchased from the show by the Tate Gallery and the Contemporary Art Society, Coker seemed destined, like them, to enjoy an extended period of recognition by the Establishment. It... Read full biography
Obituary. The Telegraph, Dec. 18, 2004. Peter Coker, who has died aged 78, was one of the leading realist painters of his generation and an important figure in the post-war movement that the critics christened, not altogether accurately, the Kitchen Sink School. While John Bratby, Jack Smith and Ed Middleditch are among the more familiar names of the movement, Coker's first one-man show at Zwemmers in 1956 - featuring large, obsessive and fiercely-painted scenes of animal carcasses in a butcher's shop - created no less of a critical stir at the time. With work purchased from the show by the Tate Gallery and the Contemporary Art Society, Coker seemed destined, like them, to enjoy an extended period of recognition by the Establishment. It was not to be. That same year, Abstract Expressionism from America - in the form of a major show at the Tate that incl... Read full biography

