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Berenice Sydney

Berenice Sydney (1944–1983), born Berenice Frieze, and professionally known as 'Berenice', was a British artist who produced a substantial body of work from 1964 until her death in 1983. Her oeuvre consists of paintings on canvas and paper, drawings, prints, children's books, costume design, and performance. A memorial exhibition of her work was held at the Royal Academy in 1984 followed by solo shows in Italy, Abu Dhabi, Bahrain, Switzerland, and Britain. Her work continues to be featured in print and watercolour shows held in Burlington House. Her work is in over 100 private and public collections.[1]

Berenice Sydney
Sydney in front of one of her paintings, London, 1972 (Photograph by Romano Cagnoni)
Born
Berenice Frieze

1944
Esher, Surrey, England
Died1983 (aged 38–39)
NationalityBritish
EducationCentral School of Art and Design
Known forPainting, printmaking
Spouse
(m. 1970; div. 1983)
Grave of Berenice Sydney in Highgate Cemetery (east side)

Biography

Berenice Sydney was born in Esher, Surrey in 1944 and educated from the age of six at the Lycée Français Charles de Gaulle in London. From her early years, she studied ballet with Marie Rambert and classical guitar with Adele Kramer. As an adult, she balanced a busy work schedule in her studio by training at the Dance Centre in Covent Garden and attending flamenco dance studios in Hampstead and New York City. Berenice was married to the Italian photographer Romano Cagnoni from 1970 until they divorced in February 1983.

In addition to reading the classics and studying mythology, she was fluent in five languages. She was enrolled at the Central School of Art and Design but left formal art education to set up a studio in Chelsea.[2]

She participated in over 40 exhibitions before her death of an asthma attack at the age of 39. She is buried in the eastern section of Highgate Cemetery. Her father, the documentary filmmaker Joseph Sydney Frieze, died a few months later and is buried with her. Lord McAlpine gave the eulogy at her funeral which was also attended by Dr. David Brown then the Assistant Keeper in Modern Collections at the Tate Gallery.

Career

Berenice Sydney was included in ten group exhibitions between 1963 and 1975 and held eleven solo shows, in addition to being invited to represent Britain at the Biennale della Grafica d'Arte in Florence in 1974. The following year she showed her "stained-glass effect" canvases at the McAlpine Gallery of the Ashmolean Museum.

Her first professional exhibition was held at the Drian Galleries in 1968 and included Susanna and the Elders with Charlie the Pigeon, Coffee Pot and 3 Yellow Flowers and The Drummer Boy.[3]

She began to exhibit her works on paper including Dancing Nymphs, Hermaphroditus, Pan and Two Nymphs, The Marriage of Psyche and Eros, Naiads Surprised by Satyrs, in 1968. Linocuts were also exhibited that year and included Aphrodite and Ares, Nymphs Dancing, Psyche and Eros, Nude Fiddling with Toe, Pan and Two Nymphs and Hebe and Artemis. She continued to explore themes relating to Persian mythology, Christian symbolism and Greek mythological subjects as well as referencing Ancient Egyptian art, creating a hieroglyph of her professional name and working on papyrus.

Responding to the exhibition Salute to Berenice Sydney held at the Royal Academy Max Wykes-Joyce wrote:[3]

In the Spring of 1968 I was much charmed by a first one-person show at the Drian Galleries of large, lively paintings which evidenced the artist's interest in dance and music, and a group of black and white drawings on mythological themesm [sic?] made in her late teens and very early twenties by the young self-taught Berenice Sydney. I praised them greatly: subesequently [sic?] show of her work were in turn singled out for admiration in Arts Review by Marina Vaizey, Pat Gilmour, Oswell Baakeston and Charles Bone. And these praises were more recently joined by those of Kenneth Garlick of the Ashmolean Museum and David Brown of the Tate Gallery. Her painting evolved from figuration to an apparent abstraction which was, in truth, a dance of colours, an expression of natural exuberance. She was continually researching new means of printmaking and mixed media works, each kind of which is represented in this, her memorial exhibition.

Painting

Sydney's work developed from representational to semi-abstract, and she soon established her style in purest abstract form starting with tiny delicate Persian Garden designs, miniatures in naturalistic colours that become abstract etchings: Bakhtiari, The Sultan's Garden, Shirvan Kabistan II, Hachly Moons, Little Squares, Saruk, which were exhibited in 1969.

From 1973 her oils on canvas also began to develop into conceptual abstractions. From discernible figures worked in flowing brush strokes her forms became multi-faceted describing movement in hundreds of colour mutations and shapes. Sydney's later paintings were developed in series, based on specific organic forms, such as leaves (see illustration), that provided a dynamic structural frame for the buildup of paint across large canvasses. Colour combined with vortex-like compositions, starting from a central point to expand outwards, enabled the artist to explore the kinesthetic qualities of visual experience in a way that relates to Bridget Riley's later work.

Printmaking

Sydney continued to experiment in oils and other media and produced etching, engravings in steel (Art in Steel exhibition 1972), copper and perspex monoprints. One of her influences was Stanley William Hayter and her etchings would then use multiple colours on a single plate. She also produced aquatints and lithographs using one plate for each colour process. Her work in serigraphy was also extensive and first exhibited in 1974.

Drawing

Sydney's drawing consistently used acrylic and oil pastels, ink and brush creating a series of works on Gemini paper. She produced a series of intensely detailed pen drawings merging the calligraphic with the figurative in a humorous way, as in Pen drawing with Jester, 1976.[4]

Children's books

Sydney wrote and illustrated a Book of Nonsense Verse 1982/3 later titled Book of Fools which she dedicated to the First of April. A page from this work featuring the poem The Ant who Danced and Pranced is featured in the catalogue to the exhibition Homage to Berenice Sydney. In it the art historian, Florian Rodari's appraisal of Sydney's work appears in French with a translation in English by Charlotte Frieze.[4] The black and white illustrations to the Book of Fools are aquatints etched in a delicately delineated style. The text is written in French and English. Four artist's proofs of the book subsequently titled Book of Fools were printed. The French version of A Book of Fools was purchased by the Bibliothèque Nationale Paris in October 1982 in addition to a number of the artist's earliest etchings, now kept in the Cabinet des Estampes. An audio cassette recording of the artist giving a reading of the Book of Fools was made at the Musée d'Elysée in Lausanne as the artist performed with castanets, accompanied by Gypsy Flamenco musicians and rendered in parts with a Yorkshire accent in homage to her father's family origins.

Exhibitions

Exhibitions during her lifetime 1968–1982

1968

  • Drian Galleries, First One Person Show, London
  • Leicester Galleries, - Group Show, London
  • Edinburgh Festival Costume Designs for Workshops Production of Clown - Televised, Grampian Productions
  • Magdelene Street Gallery. Group Show, Cambridge
  • 1969 Traverse Theatre Gallery, Group Show, Edinburgh
  • Lumley Cazalet Gallery, Group Show, London
  • Camden Arts Centre Group Show, London
  • Tib Lane Gallery, Group Show, Manchester
  • Royal Institute Galleries, Group Show F.I.B.A., London WI

1971

  • International Student House, One Person Show, London
  • Leicester Galleries. Group Show, London WI
  • Richard Demarco Gallery, Group Show, Edinburgh
  • Tib Lane Gallery, Group Show, Manchester

1972

  • Galleria Stellaria One Person Show, Florence
  • Zella 9 Gallery, Group Show, London
  • Art in Steel Exhibition, Group Show, Millbank, London
  • F.B.A. Galleries, Group Show, London SWI
  • Magdelene Gallery, Group Show, Cambridge

1973

1974

  • Education Gallery, One Person Show, Leeds City Art Gallery
  • Willis Museum and Art Gallery. One Person Show, Basingstoke
  • Biennale della Grafica d'Arte, Florence, Italy representing Great Britain
  • Haworth Art Gallery, Accrington, One Person Show

1975

1976

1982

  • The Society of Graphic Artists
  • Hampstead Artists Council
  • Free Painters and Sculptors
  • Chelsea Art Society

Posthumous exhibitions 1984 onward

1984

  • Salute to Berenice Royal Academy. One Person Show, London
  • Exhibition of British Art, Abu Dhabi Group Show
  • Exhibition of British Art, Gulf of Bahrain, Group Show
  • British Council Paris, Group Show
  • Centenary Exhibition, Leicestershire Museum and Art Gallery, Group Show

1985

  • Homage à Berenice Sydney, Edwin Engelberts Galerie d'Art Contemporain, One Person Show, Geneva

1986

  • Christmas Exhibition' Lumley Cazalet Fine Art, Group Show, London

1987

  • Berenice Sydney, Gallery of British Contemporary Art, One Person Show, Lausanne

1988

1989

  • Women in Art, Bowmoore Gallery, Group Show, London

1990

  • Contemporary British Artists, Waterman Fine Art, Group Show, London

1991

  • The London Original Print Fair, Royal Academy of Art, London

Represented by Lumley Cazalet

  • From Fautrier to Rainer, La Galerie Michel Foex, Group Show, Geneva,

including Henri Michaux, Brice Marden, Ben Nicholson, Jean Fautrier 1992

  • Homage to the British Artist Berenice Sydney, Galerie Nelly L'Epattenier, One Person Show, Lausanne

1993

  • Homage à Berenice, L'Exemplaire, Geneva, One Person Show
  • The London Original Print Fair, The Royal Academy of Art, Represented by Peter Black

1994

  • Berenice Sydney, L'Exemplaire, Geneva, One Person Show

1995

  • Art'95 Contemporary British Art Fair, London
  • Milan, Book Print Fair Group
  • The Chelsea Art Society Group Exhibition
  • A private exhibition of rare and original European prints 18th-20th century at Austin Desmonds, Campbell Fine Art
  • Magnat Gallery, London

1996

  • L'Exemplaire, Geneva, One person show

1998

  • Girls, Girls, Girls, Deborah Bates Gallery, London

2002

2006

  • Watercolours and Drawings Fair, James Kinmont Fine Art and John Iddon Fine Art, Royal Academy, London
  • Chelsea Art Fair, John Iddon Fine Art, Royal Hospital, Chelsea, London
  • Exhibition 9 paintings from the Orbit series, Modern British Artists, London

2008

  • Watercolours and Drawings Fair, Modern Works on Paper, James Kinmont Fine Art, Royal Academy, London
  • Chelsea Art Fair, John Iddon Fine Art, Chelsea Old Town Hall, London

2010

  • 20/21 British Art Fair, John Iddon Fine Art, Royal College of Art, London

Public collections

Museums and galleries

Public and university collections

Corporate and commercial collections

Private collections

  • John Jacobs, Curator of Historic Museums and Director of the Iveagh Bequest Kenwood House London
  • Galeria Peters, Buenos Aires, Argentina
  • Private Collections, San Francisco, California, USA
  • Private Collection, Washington D.C., USA
  • Private Collection, Los Angeles, California, USA
  • Private Collection, New York City, USA
  • Private Collection, Geneva, Switzerland
  • Patrick Cramer, Geneva, Switzerland
  • Michel Foex, Geneva, Switzerland
  • Darius Dabatabay, Geneva, Switzerland
  • Lady Noel Annesly, England
  • Christopher Johnston Collection, England
  • Mr. and Mrs. Hariton Embiricos, Greece
  • Sueo Mitsuma, Tokyo
  • Lord Alistair McAlpine, England
  • Linda Talbot, England
  • 4 Private Collections, Sydney, Australia

References

  1. ^ The papers of Berenice Sydney (TGA 200711), Tate Archive, The Archive of British Art since 1900, London
  2. ^ Buckman, David Artists in Britain Since 1945 (Art Dictionaries Ltd; Enl Upd edition: October 2006) ISBN 0-9532609-5-X ISBN 978-0-9532609-5-9
  3. ^ a b Max Wykes-Joyce, "Berenice Sydney", 'Arts Review', March 1984
  4. ^ a b Florian Rodari Homage to Berenice Sydney, Edwin Engelberts, Galerie Art Contemporain, Geneva 1985

berenice, sydney, 1944, 1983, born, berenice, frieze, professionally, known, berenice, british, artist, produced, substantial, body, work, from, 1964, until, death, 1983, oeuvre, consists, paintings, canvas, paper, drawings, prints, children, books, costume, d. Berenice Sydney 1944 1983 born Berenice Frieze and professionally known as Berenice was a British artist who produced a substantial body of work from 1964 until her death in 1983 Her oeuvre consists of paintings on canvas and paper drawings prints children s books costume design and performance A memorial exhibition of her work was held at the Royal Academy in 1984 followed by solo shows in Italy Abu Dhabi Bahrain Switzerland and Britain Her work continues to be featured in print and watercolour shows held in Burlington House Her work is in over 100 private and public collections 1 Berenice SydneySydney in front of one of her paintings London 1972 Photograph by Romano Cagnoni BornBerenice Frieze1944Esher Surrey EnglandDied1983 aged 38 39 NationalityBritishEducationCentral School of Art and DesignKnown forPainting printmakingSpouseRomano Cagnoni m 1970 div 1983 wbr Grave of Berenice Sydney in Highgate Cemetery east side Contents 1 Biography 2 Career 2 1 Painting 2 2 Printmaking 2 3 Drawing 2 4 Children s books 3 Exhibitions 4 Public collections 4 1 Museums and galleries 4 2 Public and university collections 4 3 Corporate and commercial collections 4 4 Private collections 5 ReferencesBiography EditBerenice Sydney was born in Esher Surrey in 1944 and educated from the age of six at the Lycee Francais Charles de Gaulle in London From her early years she studied ballet with Marie Rambert and classical guitar with Adele Kramer As an adult she balanced a busy work schedule in her studio by training at the Dance Centre in Covent Garden and attending flamenco dance studios in Hampstead and New York City Berenice was married to the Italian photographer Romano Cagnoni from 1970 until they divorced in February 1983 In addition to reading the classics and studying mythology she was fluent in five languages She was enrolled at the Central School of Art and Design but left formal art education to set up a studio in Chelsea 2 She participated in over 40 exhibitions before her death of an asthma attack at the age of 39 She is buried in the eastern section of Highgate Cemetery Her father the documentary filmmaker Joseph Sydney Frieze died a few months later and is buried with her Lord McAlpine gave the eulogy at her funeral which was also attended by Dr David Brown then the Assistant Keeper in Modern Collections at the Tate Gallery Career EditBerenice Sydney was included in ten group exhibitions between 1963 and 1975 and held eleven solo shows in addition to being invited to represent Britain at the Biennale della Grafica d Arte in Florence in 1974 The following year she showed her stained glass effect canvases at the McAlpine Gallery of the Ashmolean Museum Her first professional exhibition was held at the Drian Galleries in 1968 and included Susanna and the Elders with Charlie the Pigeon Coffee Pot and 3 Yellow Flowers and The Drummer Boy 3 She began to exhibit her works on paper including Dancing Nymphs Hermaphroditus Pan and Two Nymphs The Marriage of Psyche and Eros Naiads Surprised by Satyrs in 1968 Linocuts were also exhibited that year and included Aphrodite and Ares Nymphs Dancing Psyche and Eros Nude Fiddling with Toe Pan and Two Nymphs and Hebe and Artemis She continued to explore themes relating to Persian mythology Christian symbolism and Greek mythological subjects as well as referencing Ancient Egyptian art creating a hieroglyph of her professional name and working on papyrus Responding to the exhibition Salute to Berenice Sydney held at the Royal Academy Max Wykes Joyce wrote 3 In the Spring of 1968 I was much charmed by a first one person show at the Drian Galleries of large lively paintings which evidenced the artist s interest in dance and music and a group of black and white drawings on mythological themesm sic made in her late teens and very early twenties by the young self taught Berenice Sydney I praised them greatly subesequently sic show of her work were in turn singled out for admiration in Arts Review by Marina Vaizey Pat Gilmour Oswell Baakeston and Charles Bone And these praises were more recently joined by those of Kenneth Garlick of the Ashmolean Museum and David Brown of the Tate Gallery Her painting evolved from figuration to an apparent abstraction which was in truth a dance of colours an expression of natural exuberance She was continually researching new means of printmaking and mixed media works each kind of which is represented in this her memorial exhibition Painting Edit Sydney s work developed from representational to semi abstract and she soon established her style in purest abstract form starting with tiny delicate Persian Garden designs miniatures in naturalistic colours that become abstract etchings Bakhtiari The Sultan s Garden Shirvan Kabistan II Hachly Moons Little Squares Saruk which were exhibited in 1969 From 1973 her oils on canvas also began to develop into conceptual abstractions From discernible figures worked in flowing brush strokes her forms became multi faceted describing movement in hundreds of colour mutations and shapes Sydney s later paintings were developed in series based on specific organic forms such as leaves see illustration that provided a dynamic structural frame for the buildup of paint across large canvasses Colour combined with vortex like compositions starting from a central point to expand outwards enabled the artist to explore the kinesthetic qualities of visual experience in a way that relates to Bridget Riley s later work Printmaking Edit Sydney continued to experiment in oils and other media and produced etching engravings in steel Art in Steel exhibition 1972 copper and perspex monoprints One of her influences was Stanley William Hayter and her etchings would then use multiple colours on a single plate She also produced aquatints and lithographs using one plate for each colour process Her work in serigraphy was also extensive and first exhibited in 1974 Drawing Edit Sydney s drawing consistently used acrylic and oil pastels ink and brush creating a series of works on Gemini paper She produced a series of intensely detailed pen drawings merging the calligraphic with the figurative in a humorous way as in Pen drawing with Jester 1976 4 Children s books Edit Sydney wrote and illustrated a Book of Nonsense Verse 1982 3 later titled Book of Fools which she dedicated to the First of April A page from this work featuring the poem The Ant who Danced and Pranced is featured in the catalogue to the exhibition Homage to Berenice Sydney In it the art historian Florian Rodari s appraisal of Sydney s work appears in French with a translation in English by Charlotte Frieze 4 The black and white illustrations to the Book of Fools are aquatints etched in a delicately delineated style The text is written in French and English Four artist s proofs of the book subsequently titled Book of Fools were printed The French version of A Book of Fools was purchased by the Bibliotheque Nationale Paris in October 1982 in addition to a number of the artist s earliest etchings now kept in the Cabinet des Estampes An audio cassette recording of the artist giving a reading of the Book of Fools was made at the Musee d Elysee in Lausanne as the artist performed with castanets accompanied by Gypsy Flamenco musicians and rendered in parts with a Yorkshire accent in homage to her father s family origins Exhibitions EditExhibitions during her lifetime 1968 19821968 Drian Galleries First One Person Show London Leicester Galleries Group Show London Edinburgh Festival Costume Designs for Workshops Production of Clown Televised Grampian Productions Magdelene Street Gallery Group Show Cambridge 1969 Traverse Theatre Gallery Group Show Edinburgh Lumley Cazalet Gallery Group Show London Camden Arts Centre Group Show London Tib Lane Gallery Group Show Manchester Royal Institute Galleries Group Show F I B A London WI1971 International Student House One Person Show London Leicester Galleries Group Show London WI Richard Demarco Gallery Group Show Edinburgh Tib Lane Gallery Group Show Manchester1972 Galleria Stellaria One Person Show Florence Zella 9 Gallery Group Show London Art in Steel Exhibition Group Show Millbank London F B A Galleries Group Show London SWI Magdelene Gallery Group Show Cambridge1973 Christopher Drake Gallery Group Show London Kenwood House Museum Two Person Show London mounted by the Greater London Council Bear Lane Gallery One Person Show Oxford Van Dyke Gallery One Person Show Bristol University Bibliotheque Nationale de France Group Show Paris Artists from Five Continents Group Show Swiss Cottage Central Library1974 Education Gallery One Person Show Leeds City Art Gallery Willis Museum and Art Gallery One Person Show Basingstoke Biennale della Grafica d Arte Florence Italy representing Great Britain Haworth Art Gallery Accrington One Person Show1975 McAlpine Gallery One Person Show Ashmolean Museum Oxford County Museum One Person Show Warwick Museum and Art Gallery Three Person Show Leicester Galleria d Arte One Person Show Milan St Catherine s College Oxford One Person Show Oxford Trinity College Oxford One Person Show Leicester Museum amp Art Gallery Prints1976 Biennale European de la gravure Group Show Mulhouse Galeria Peters Group Show Buenos Aires Gallery of Modern Art Two Person Show Buenos Aires Cardiff University One Person Show Cardiff Leeds Art Gallery Series of 6 lectures and demonstrations of etching techniques1982 The Society of Graphic Artists Hampstead Artists Council Free Painters and Sculptors Chelsea Art SocietyPosthumous exhibitions 1984 onward1984 Salute to Berenice Royal Academy One Person Show London Exhibition of British Art Abu Dhabi Group Show Exhibition of British Art Gulf of Bahrain Group Show British Council Paris Group Show Centenary Exhibition Leicestershire Museum and Art Gallery Group Show1985 Homage a Berenice Sydney Edwin Engelberts Galerie d Art Contemporain One Person Show Geneva1986 Christmas Exhibition Lumley Cazalet Fine Art Group Show London1987 Berenice Sydney Gallery of British Contemporary Art One Person Show Lausanne1988 Berenice Sydney La Galerie Michel Foex Geneva Watercolour painting One Person Show1989 Women in Art Bowmoore Gallery Group Show London1990 Contemporary British Artists Waterman Fine Art Group Show London1991 The London Original Print Fair Royal Academy of Art LondonRepresented by Lumley Cazalet From Fautrier to Rainer La Galerie Michel Foex Group Show Geneva including Henri Michaux Brice Marden Ben Nicholson Jean Fautrier 1992 Homage to the British Artist Berenice Sydney Galerie Nelly L Epattenier One Person Show Lausanne1993 Homage a Berenice L Exemplaire Geneva One Person Show The London Original Print Fair The Royal Academy of Art Represented by Peter Black1994 Berenice Sydney L Exemplaire Geneva One Person Show1995 Art 95 Contemporary British Art Fair London Milan Book Print Fair Group The Chelsea Art Society Group Exhibition A private exhibition of rare and original European prints 18th 20th century at Austin Desmonds Campbell Fine Art Magnat Gallery London1996 L Exemplaire Geneva One person show1998 Girls Girls Girls Deborah Bates Gallery London2002 Group show La Galerie Michel Foex Geneva including Ben Nicholson Rachel Whiteread2006 Watercolours and Drawings Fair James Kinmont Fine Art and John Iddon Fine Art Royal Academy London Chelsea Art Fair John Iddon Fine Art Royal Hospital Chelsea London Exhibition 9 paintings from the Orbit series Modern British Artists London2008 Watercolours and Drawings Fair Modern Works on Paper James Kinmont Fine Art Royal Academy London Chelsea Art Fair John Iddon Fine Art Chelsea Old Town Hall London2010 20 21 British Art Fair John Iddon Fine Art Royal College of Art LondonPublic collections EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message Museums and galleries Edit The British Museum London The Victoria and Albert Museum London The Tate Gallery London The British Council London The Ashmolean Museum Oxford The Bibliotheque nationale de France Paris Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen Rotterdam The Royal Library of Belgium Brussels The Uffizi Gallery Florence Galleria M Arte Moderna Bologna The Phillips Collection Washington The National Library of Congress Washington The Smithsonian Institution Washington Philadelphia Museum of Art Fogg Art Museum Harvard University Menil Collection Houston Texas Smith College Museum of Art Northampton USA Brooklyn Museum of Art New York Capital Nacional de la Nautica Buenos Aires Graphische Sammlung der ETH Zurich Switzerland New York Public Library New York USA Jenisch Collection Musee Cantonale Vevey Switzerland Victoria Art Gallery Bath City Art Gallery Bradford Museum and Art Gallery Bolton Cecil Higgins Art Gallery and Bedford Museum County Museum Derby Towner Art Gallery Eastbourne City Art Gallerv Glasgow Laing Art Gallery Newcastle upon Tyne Leicester City Gallery Graves Art Gallery Sheffield Walker Art Gallery Liverpool City Museum amp Art Gallery Newport Reading College amp School of Arts and Design now Thames Valley University Luton Museum amp Art Gallery Luton South London Gallery Museum of Reading Newnham City Collection City Art Gallery Wakefield Humberside Education Services Humberside Leisure Services Batley Library Rochdale Libraries Art Services Museum amp Art Gallery Rochdale Durham County Council Norwich Castle Museum Nonsuch High School Cecil Higgins Gallery Bedford Museum and Art Gallery Oldham Usher Gallery Lincoln Portsmouth City Art GalleryPublic and university collections Edit University of Sussex University of Manchester Cardiff University University of Bristol University of Bath University of Glasgow University of Cardiff University of Lancaster University of Sheffield University of Salford Bristol Education Authority Leeds Education Department Reading Education Department Derbyshire County Council Inner London Education Department ILEA Royal Brompton and Harefield NHS Trust St Thomas Hospital London St Mary s Hospital London Bingley amp Havering County Council London Borough of Bromley Education Office Preston Lancashire County Council Nottingham Education CommitteeCorporate and commercial collections Edit James Walter Thompson London First National Bank of Boston Chase Manhattan Bank Stellaria Galleria Florence Pallas Gallery Lumley Cazalet Gallery Bear Lane Gallery Oxford Drian Galleries London Butler Miller Wilkin Warburton World Graphics Hilton HotelsPrivate collections Edit John Jacobs Curator of Historic Museums and Director of the Iveagh Bequest Kenwood House London Galeria Peters Buenos Aires Argentina Private Collections San Francisco California USA Private Collection Washington D C USA Private Collection Los Angeles California USA Private Collection New York City USA Private Collection Geneva Switzerland Patrick Cramer Geneva Switzerland Michel Foex Geneva Switzerland Darius Dabatabay Geneva Switzerland Lady Noel Annesly England Christopher Johnston Collection England Mr and Mrs Hariton Embiricos Greece Sueo Mitsuma Tokyo Lord Alistair McAlpine England Linda Talbot England 4 Private Collections Sydney AustraliaReferences Edit The papers of Berenice Sydney TGA 200711 Tate Archive The Archive of British Art since 1900 London Buckman David Artists in Britain Since 1945 Art Dictionaries Ltd Enl Upd edition October 2006 ISBN 0 9532609 5 X ISBN 978 0 9532609 5 9 a b Max Wykes Joyce Berenice Sydney Arts Review March 1984 a b Florian Rodari Homage to Berenice Sydney Edwin Engelberts Galerie Art Contemporain Geneva 1985 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Berenice Sydney amp oldid 1116748450, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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