Arthur Berry (playwright)
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Arthur Berry (7 February 1925 – 4 July 1994) was an English playwright, poet, teacher and artist, who was born in
Smallthorne Smallthorne (population: 5,827 – 2011 Census) is an area in the city of Stoke-on-Trent in Staffordshire, England. It is in the north-east of the city, near Burslem. Smallthorne borders Bradeley and Chell in the north, Norton-in-the-Moors in ...
,
Stoke-on-Trent Stoke-on-Trent (often abbreviated to Stoke) is a city and Unitary authorities of England, unitary authority area in Staffordshire, England, with an area of . In 2019, the city had an estimated population of 256,375. It is the largest settlement ...
. His individual creative work became deeply rooted in the culture, people and landscape of the industrial pottery town of
Burslem Burslem ( ) is one of the six towns that along with Hanley, Tunstall, Fenton, Longton and Stoke-upon-Trent form part of the city of Stoke-on-Trent in Staffordshire, England. It is often referred to as the "mother town" of Stoke on Trent. T ...
.


Life

Berry was the son of a
publican In antiquity, publicans (Greek τελώνης ''telōnēs'' (singular); Latin ''publicanus'' (singular); ''publicani'' (plural)) were public contractors, in whose official capacity they often supplied the Roman legions and military, managed the ...
and grew up in the potteries city of Stoke-on-Trent during the Depression. He was born with a crippled arm; as he could not work as a miner or manual labourer, Berry was enrolled at the
Burslem School of Art Burslem School of Art was an art school in the centre of the town of Burslem in the Potteries district of England. Students from the school played an important role in the local pottery industry. Pottery was made on the site of the school from th ...
in the city. Despite a rebellious start there, he came under the care of Gordon Mitchell Forsyth (1879–1952), director of art education and a successful pottery designer.


Studies at Royal College of Art

Berry gained a place at the
Royal College of Art The Royal College of Art (RCA) is a public research university in London, United Kingdom, with campuses in South Kensington, Battersea and White City. It is the only entirely postgraduate art and design university in the United Kingdom. It offe ...
, as did a number of the more talented Burslem students. During his time at the Royal College the institution was evacuated from
Kensington Kensington is a district in the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea in the West End of London, West of Central London. The district's commercial heart is Kensington High Street, running on an east–west axis. The north-east is taken up b ...
to
Ambleside Ambleside is a town and former civil parish, now in the parish of Lakes, in Cumbria, in North West England. Historically in Westmorland, it marks the head (and sits on the east side of the northern headwater) of Windermere, England's larges ...
in the
Lake District The Lake District, also known as the Lakes or Lakeland, is a mountainous region in North West England. A popular holiday destination, it is famous for its lakes, forests, and mountains (or ''fells''), and its associations with William Wordswor ...
, to escape the German bombing of London during the
Second World War World War II or the Second World War, often abbreviated as WWII or WW2, was a world war that lasted from 1939 to 1945. It involved the vast majority of the world's countries—including all of the great powers—forming two opposin ...
. Berry, who suffered from
agoraphobia Agoraphobia is a mental and behavioral disorder, specifically an anxiety disorder characterized by symptoms of anxiety in situations where the person perceives their environment to be unsafe with no easy way to escape. These situations can in ...
, did not find the rural surroundings of Ambleside particularly to his taste. However, he appreciated the intense autumn colours which are characteristic of the locality. He spent the last year of the course in London.


Teaching career

After the war, Berry became an art teacher. He worked in London and Manchester, but as a teacher, he is best known for his long association with Burslem School of Art, where he had studied. Burslem School of Art was absorbed within
Stoke-on-Trent College of Art The Stoke-on-Trent Regional College of Art was one of three colleges that were merged in 1971 to form North Staffordshire Polytechnic (later renamed as Staffordshire Polytechnic and now Staffordshire University). The College of Art achieved Regio ...
, which in turn became part of
North Staffordshire Polytechnic , mottoeng = Dare to know , type = Public , endowment = £70 million (2015) , administrative_staff = 1,375 , chancellor = Francis Fitzherbert, 15th Baron Stafford , vice_chancellor = Professor Martin Jones , ...
in 1971. Berry was a lecturer in painting at the Polytechnic until 1985. Berry's second wife, Cynthia, was one of his students. They married in 1966 and lived at
Wolstanton Wolstanton is a suburban town on the outskirts of Newcastle-under-Lyme, Staffordshire. History The Roman road the Rykeneld Street passed through Wolstanton. Wolstanton is mentioned in the Norman Domesday book where it is listed amongst the ...
,
Newcastle-under-Lyme Newcastle-under-Lyme ( RP: , ) is a market town and the administrative centre of the Borough of Newcastle-under-Lyme in Staffordshire, England. The 2011 census population of the town was 75,082, whilst the wider borough had a population of 1 ...
.


Writing

Berry's first stage play was performed in 1976. His 1979 work ''Lament for the Lost Pubs of Burslem'' was awarded the Sony/Pye Award for the best radio monologue of 1979. It was also printed as a text in '' The Listener'' magazine (Christmas edition, 20–27 December 1979) and it starts with the lines: :''"I sat down and wept when I remembered the lost pubs of Burslem, the demolished Star that stood where the Moonglow Ballroom stands now, on the corner of the street of the Preacher and the Tote office; it was a gaunt, dark building nicknamed the Star of Bethlehem, a grimey stuccoed star the colour of years of wet smoke. From outside it looked forbidding and empty, lit only by one or two naked electric light bulbs; its doors were difficult to find, its main door on the corner of the Square had been screwed down for some reason and on the inside covered with a piece of painted plywood. Only the side-doors would let you in and these were narrow and difficult to open. One was in Queen's Street and the other in William Clowes Street, opposite the Dolphin... for all its dreary appearance, the Star was the highest drinking temple in the town; nothing has been the same since it was knocked down. No pub has been more lamented."'' Berry wrote an autobiography titled ''A Three and Sevenpence Halfpenny Man''. His other works include ''Dandelions'' (a volume of poems), and ''The Little Gold-Mine'', a collection of stories about Potteries' life. In 2018 a collection of unpublished poems by Arthur Berry were discovered in papers in the estate inside an envelope postdated 1972. All were typed and named. With the help of Barewall Art Gallery which works closely with the estate of Arthur Berry, a slim book of poetry by Arthur called ''On the Street'' was published.


Berry's paintings

His paintings are held in numerous private and public collections. Berry has been referred to as 'the Lowry of the Potteries', being so described in the title of a 2007 exhibition of his work. The comparison was discussed in two related letters to '' The Sentinel'': :Arthur Berry... ''was a good teacher and focus for art activity at the
Burslem Burslem ( ) is one of the six towns that along with Hanley, Tunstall, Fenton, Longton and Stoke-upon-Trent form part of the city of Stoke-on-Trent in Staffordshire, England. It is often referred to as the "mother town" of Stoke on Trent. T ...
& Stoke Art School. I do not agree that he is for many the finest 20th century artist from Stoke - there are other candidates also. Mr Berry's work lies somewhere between painting and drawing - for me paint and its properties hold most attraction. Mr Berry's talent was spread over several areas - drawing, painting, writing, plays, poems and teaching. I do not think I am good enough myself to do several things well, so concentrate on one (painting). Mr Berry said he admired Lowry and once encountered him in a
Manchester Manchester () is a city in Greater Manchester, England. It had a population of 552,000 in 2021. It is bordered by the Cheshire Plain to the south, the Pennines to the north and east, and the neighbouring city of Salford to the west. The t ...
Gallery - said he was built and made for a particular task - as an artist recording the vanishing industrial scene of Manchester....Mr Berry was, I feel, a humorist whose interest was the people of the old working class of Stoke - a type of person who no longer exists. I mostly liked his landscapes. They seemed to convey that strange Stoke light which appeals to me and the old buildings and streets which were very much part of my own childhood and youth.'' :''The Arthur Berry exhibition of work at Ford Green Hall...is compact but conveys the flavour of what the local writer and poet was all about. There is an earthiness and a vitality about much of his work and though abstract painting is not everyone's cup of tea, there is a power about Berry's that is probably best conveyed if you look at the pieces collectively. The Sentinel's article called him the Lowry of the Potteries, though in my opinion, the paintings of
Biddulph Biddulph is a town in Staffordshire, England, north of Stoke-on-Trent and south-east of Congleton, Cheshire. Origin of the name Biddulph's name may come from Anglo-Saxon/Old English ''bī dylfe'' = "beside the pit or quarry". It may also ...
Moor-born C W Brown, sometimes known as "The Potteries' Primitive", stand comparison. Berry was a fan of Brown, incidentally.'' From July 2015 to January 2016 a major show titled ''Lowry and Berry: Observers of Urban Life'', displaying works dating from the 1960s to 1994, was held at the Potteries Museum and Art Gallery in Stoke-on-Trent.


Stoke-on-Trent life

Berry recalls the artistic inspiration he obtained from... "the streets of my early childhood, the moorland landscape,
pit village A pit village, colliery village or mining village is a settlement built by colliery owners to house their workers. The villages were built on the coalfields of Great Britain during the Industrial Revolution where new coal mines were developed in ...
s, public houses, chip shops, night town and later avenue life."Arthur Berry, ''Dandelions'': poems, 1993 Lamenting change, he bemoans that, "the old wooden mangle rollers were replaced by rubber wringers, the iron range grate by little fancy tiled affairs, the elegant, slim paper packets of five Woodbines disappeared..." He felt he had been born into a tightly cohesive society, but "the values that had held the working class together began to slowly be eroded." He loved a world that was filled with, "a line of shunted coal waggons...wreaths of steam and a smell of gas...youths playing cards at the back of the old knackers yard...old men cough in the betting shops and huge fat women queue in the Co-op...the chain row and pit-head gear." This was a "place of empty chapels and aborted kilns", "the window cleaner with wild eyes and a mania for gambling", or indeed "an effeminate man who wears a ginger wig...muttering to himself all day, he pushes an old pram with a bird cage in it." Touchingly, he noticed the habits of the people: "at weekends when you are flush and filled with drink or the prospect of drink", and when one might feel "as dry as a lime-burner's clog." He loved "the sunken bricks of his garden path." and even a visit to the gents could become an inspiring revelation: "as I stand piddling in the crazed urinal stall I can see the red and green tail lights of some night plane moving across this area of infinite velvet over the darkened hoop of the world." Berry's love of North Staffordshire was deep and permanent; he indulged in an incurable addiction to the place. He "had an inexplicable attraction to the place and...was attached to the area by "an invisible umbilical cord", which could never be cut."Jonathan Pimm, "Thinker of the Working Class: Arthur Berry" Obituary, ''Evening Sentinel'', Stoke-on-Trent, 6 July 1994, p.12 He said of his childhood "every house seemed to have an old woman, a drunken man, a gang of kids and a snarling dog." Certainly then he was, "a thinker of the working class who developed a love of middle class pursuits." He said he had "always worked out of one world, the working class world of which I am part", while declaring, "I am a man of habit and pattern." He "became a cult figure following many television appearances in the Midlands." His attachment to the place was a legend. For example, "when he obtained work as a teacher in
Chelsea College of Art Chelsea College of Arts is a constituent college of the University of the Arts London based in London, United Kingdom, and is a leading British art and design institution with an international reputation. It offers further and higher educat ...
he commuted every day and night from Biddulph Moor."Arthur Berry Obituary, Biddulph Chronicle, 15 July 1994, p.1 And indeed "propping up the bar at his local public house...is where he felt most comfortable."Arthur Berry Obituary, The Times, 8 July 1994 Yet it was during the 1950s that the, "crushing black agoraphobia descended on him, virtually imprisoning him in North Staffordshire for the rest of his life."
Peter Cheeseman Peter Barrie Cheeseman, CBE (27 January 1932, Cowplain, Hampshire – 27 April 2010, Stoke-on-Trent) was a British theatre director who is credited with having pioneered "theatre in the round". Early life His father's work as a Naval Commun ...
, Rich Dark Portraits of Pits and Potteries, Arthur Berry Obituary, ''
The Guardian ''The Guardian'' is a British daily newspaper. It was founded in 1821 as ''The Manchester Guardian'', and changed its name in 1959. Along with its sister papers ''The Observer'' and ''The Guardian Weekly'', ''The Guardian'' is part of the Gu ...
'', 7 July 1994
But as a man, poet, playwright and artist he came into his own.
Peter Cheeseman Peter Barrie Cheeseman, CBE (27 January 1932, Cowplain, Hampshire – 27 April 2010, Stoke-on-Trent) was a British theatre director who is credited with having pioneered "theatre in the round". Early life His father's work as a Naval Commun ...
(Director, for thirty-five years, of the
Victoria Theatre, Stoke-on-Trent The New Vic Theatre is a purpose-built theatre in the round in Newcastle-under-Lyme, Staffordshire. The theatre opened in 1986, replacing a converted cinema, the Victoria Theatre in Hartshill, Stoke-on-Trent. History In the early 1960s, Steph ...
and, latterly, the New Victoria Theatre, Newcastle-under-Lyme), recalls the many animated conversations they had enjoyed, and "the swift gestures of his good left arm, banging at the elbow of his useless right...and the rich talk that pours out of him." He was "eloquent in every way...a vigorous and expressive poet...a writer of stories, a dramatist...grotesquely hilarious... ndan inspiring teacher of art, loved and admired by his students." He was "a large, ungainly and glum man, tall and remote, cloth cap sitting permanently over his expressionless face." He seemed to have something of a love-hate relationship with his art, for "he once sent a groaning van-load off to Stoke tip: a great weight lifted off me." He was really "a painter and poet of the cluttered and dying landscape of pits and ironworks...he writes of that world with unexpected imagery and a great roaring sense of humour, sometimes wry, often grotesque." As a painter, he strained "to paint a world he loved passionately for its vigour and its energy and its richness before the bulldozer scraped it away." He felt his paintings to be "the most eloquent utterances, portraits of a world seen from the bottom of my rut." This was indeed "a world filled with images of people and landscape that have been twisted and worn into strange shapes by hard work and poverty. My Parthenon is an allotment hut knocked together out of bits of rubbish. It is the richness of poor things that I am drawn to." As he told Peter Cheeseman, "everything I have ever drawn, every house, every man, every face has its roots in those few streets f SmallthorneAll the things I have written, or hope to write, I am sure will have the same roots." The rare and wonderfully warm observations Berry made of working people are perhaps the most enduring: "old women, who sat night after night, squat as frogs, drinking, watching, eating and taking all in",Arthur Berry, Lament for the Lost Pubs of Burslem, '' The Listener'', 20 & 27 December 1979, pp. 853–5 "and the publican had got a clean collar and tie on, and all the world was ship-shape--this was happiness." "I once saw a pot-woman dance an impromptu fertility dance...the woman sitting with him had knees the size of hams, and drank a case of bottled beer as she sat there." And "then there are the princes of drink, men high in the hierarchy of booze, popes of the tap-room...they manage to live and live with style; to smoke and drink and back horses without ever seeming to concern themselves about money...savour the full richness of the working class who can live without work...I have known such men rear big families on the dole, and strut up the street with a rose in their buttonhole." Then there are the "ordinary men who cannot make ends meet and are under the rule of women...lesser men, who are pestered by women and children, whooping cough and rashes of one sort or another...troubles that reduce an honest man to a worrying machine...all the bellyaching and mither and half-pint scrimping that bogs most men down...the poverty, and the poverty of just being able to make ends meet... or it isbosses and women and children hopull men down from their dignity."


People and places of Berry's world

In Berry's autobiography ''A Three and Sevenpence Halfpenny Man'' he wrote of his childhood and of his daily life at
Burslem School of Art Burslem School of Art was an art school in the centre of the town of Burslem in the Potteries district of England. Students from the school played an important role in the local pottery industry. Pottery was made on the site of the school from th ...
. He tells of going down to London and meeting "the two Roberts",
Robert MacBryde Robert MacBryde (5 December 1913 – 6 May 1966) was a Scotland, Scottish still-life and figure painter and a theatre Scenic design, set designer. Early life and career MacBryde was born in Maybole, Ayrshire, to John MacBryde, a cement laboure ...
and
Robert Colquhoun Robert Colquhoun (20 December 1914 – 20 September 1962) was a Scotland, Scottish Painting, painter, printmaker and theatre Scenic design, set designer. Colquhoun was born in Kilmarnock and was educated at Kilmarnock Academy. He won a s ...
, of perusing pictures in the galleries of the capital and of boozing his way through his student life there at the
Royal College of Art The Royal College of Art (RCA) is a public research university in London, United Kingdom, with campuses in South Kensington, Battersea and White City. It is the only entirely postgraduate art and design university in the United Kingdom. It offe ...
in Chelsea. He tells of life in Stoke as well as his trips abroad, first with his wife and then in his later years when he travelled on his own little
Grand Tour The Grand Tour was the principally 17th- to early 19th-century custom of a traditional trip through Europe, with Italy as a key destination, undertaken by upper-class young European men of sufficient means and rank (typically accompanied by a tuto ...
through
Italy Italy ( it, Italia ), officially the Italian Republic, ) or the Republic of Italy, is a country in Southern Europe. It is located in the middle of the Mediterranean Sea, and its territory largely coincides with the homonymous geographical re ...
and
France France (), officially the French Republic ( ), is a country primarily located in Western Europe. It also comprises of Overseas France, overseas regions and territories in the Americas and the Atlantic Ocean, Atlantic, Pacific Ocean, Pac ...
and into
Spain , image_flag = Bandera de España.svg , image_coat = Escudo de España (mazonado).svg , national_motto = ''Plus ultra'' (Latin)(English: "Further Beyond") , national_anthem = (English: "Royal March") , i ...
. His book of short stories, ''The Little Gold Mine'' depicts the people of North Staffordshire and their lives in the 1950s and 60s and includes pencil sketches of those same people. Berry describes many people and places in his poems and stories. These include "a dirty-faced child", andelions, 39a "chinless creature with slack stockings", 9and "a baby with a big head and a chalk-white face who didn't look as though it was for this world long". 9All "her ever thinks about is her belly, she would eat a raw monkey if there was any chance." 1In a long poem, he describes lots of people one might encounter in a dole office: "the wives of unemployed window cleaners, threadbare dandies, part-time tatooists, ex-bin men with double ruptures, alcoholic chefs, addleheads, pinheads, honest clerks, and loud-mouthed shitheads, with hanging trouser arses, flyboys and water-headed idiots led by their mothers, and reasonable men, genuine victims with polished shoes." 4Also a man who helps poor people make claims: "a master of claims and benefits, a poor man's lawyer in fact", 7helping "a poverty-stricken illiterate", 7and "men who have put their hopes on horses - men that have lived beyond their women, and those who were always too ill-shaped to love, and so loved drink...and laughing men, who have boozed their dead wives club money, and those that sleep late and stand waiting for opening time", 8for "drinking men often die lonely deaths, those who have forsaken women and have died in their camaraderie of booze." 4As opposed to those "dutiful husbands who have faced up to their responsibilities and not drunk every penny they could get their hands on." 4He describes "an old man in a gate hole spits into the cobbled backs and watches a young woman with a fat behind, pinning washing out, in a pair of slacks." 5He describes a pub regular called Bernard who "has a small stomach and has difficulty in polishing off a bag of crisps at one go", 7Love, Berry suggests, "is also often held in silence and sometimes you don't know it's been there till it's gone". 6 His advice about art can be summarised thus: "in painting pictures, accidents can often be fortuitous". 5


Legacy

In the early years of the 2000s there was an annual ''Arthur Berry Fellowship'' award for young artists, administered on behalf of his widow Cynthia Berry.


Bibliography of Berry's works


Plays

Mainly performed at the Victoria Theatre, Stoke-on-Trent. In 1986 the
New Vic Theatre The New Vic Theatre is a purpose-built theatre in the round in Newcastle-under-Lyme, Staffordshire. The theatre opened in 1986, replacing a converted cinema, the Victoria Theatre in Hartshill, Stoke-on-Trent. History In the early 1960s, Stephen J ...
,
Newcastle-under-Lyme Newcastle-under-Lyme ( RP: , ) is a market town and the administrative centre of the Borough of Newcastle-under-Lyme in Staffordshire, England. The 2011 census population of the town was 75,082, whilst the wider borough had a population of 1 ...
, opened and premiered "St George of Scotia Road". * Olive Goes to Town, a comedy in one act for women ith Deane Baker 1958 * The Spanish Dancer from Pinnox Street, 1976 * Wizards All o-author 1977 * Dr Fergo's Last Passion, 1979 * Quiet please, 1981 * Dr Fergo Rides Again, 1982 * The Sweet Bird of Card Street, 1984 * St George of Scotia Road, 1986 * Miss Cardell's School Days, nd * The Dance of Aberkariu's, nd


For radio

Most recordings were made privately between Arthur Berry and Arthur Wood in Arthur Berry's home. Some of the recordings were broadcast on BBC Radio Stoke. Copyright remains with the estate of Arthur Berry and Arthur Wood. * Homage to the Chip * Lullaby of Queen Street * Lament for the Lost Pubs of Burslem, 1979 Arthur Wood accepted a PYE radio award for best radio recording in 1979 for Arthur's monologue of "Lament for the Lost Pubs of Burslem" * Sweet Mystery of life * In Praise of Backs * Just a Steady Six * Happy Family * Homage to the Oatcake * The Meatmarket, 1980 A collection of eight recordings were compiled into a tape recording, ''Lullaby of Queen Street'', which was released in 1980. A release of the recording was released to coincide with the Lowry and Berry exhibition in July 2015.


For television

* ''Half a Smile from Stoke''
BBC #REDIRECT BBC #REDIRECT BBC Here i going to introduce about the best teacher of my life b BALAJI sir. He is the precious gift that I got befor 2yrs . How has helped and thought all the concept and made my success in the 10th board exam. ...
...
''Omnibus'' production * ''A Three and Sevenpence Halfpenny Man'' Central TV ''Contact'' Series * ''Arthur Berry of Hanley'' ATV 1978


Others

* Street Corner Ballads ~Arthur Berry, Ironmarket, Paperback, 30 July 1977 * ''A Three and Sevenpence Halfpenny Man'', Kermase Editions, Paperback, 1984 * The Little Gold-Mine, stories, 1991 * ''Dandelions'', poems, 1993 * Arthur Berry: An Observer of Urban Life'', Art Catalogue 2015 * ''On The Street: Poems by Arthur Berry'' Barewall Books, Paperback, 2018


Retrospectives

* ''Arthur Berry retrospective exhibition: Stoke-on-Trent City Museum and Art Gallery, 17 September-27 October 1984'', catalogue, Stoke-on-Trent City Museum and Art Gallery (1984). * ''Arthur Berry''. The Gallery, Manchester, 1995. * ''Arthur Berry: twenty-five paintings'', School of Art, Burslem, Stoke-on-Trent, 29 April - 20 May 2005. * ''Arthur Berry – the Lowry of the Potteries'', Ford Green Hall, Smallthorne, Stoke-on-Trent, 2007: "Local artist, poet and writer Arthur Berry had strong links with
Smallthorne Smallthorne (population: 5,827 – 2011 Census) is an area in the city of Stoke-on-Trent in Staffordshire, England. It is in the north-east of the city, near Burslem. Smallthorne borders Bradeley and Chell in the north, Norton-in-the-Moors in ...
and this small display focuses on his paintings, writing and unique sense of humour. It includes a video with footage of the artist speaking about his work". * ''Arthur Berry poetry recital'', Ford Green Hall 29 April 2007.Arthur Berry's poetry recited at Ford Green Hall
Stoke-on-Trent City Council press release dated 2007-04-26 * ''Arthur Berry: private'', School of Art, Burslem, Stoke-on-Trent, 16 July 2010 – 24 August 2010. * ''The Boys'', Keele University, Staffordshire; May 2012. Exhibition alongside work of
Jack Simcock Jack Simcock (6 June 1929-13 May 2012) was a British painter. He was born to a mining family in Biddulph, Staffordshire and studied at Burslem School of Art. He is best known for "a long series of bleak, sombre oils on board" of the Mow Cop area ...
and Enos Lovatt.''The Sentinel'', 15 May 2012,
Artist Jack Simcock dies on eve of exhibition
, 14 May 2013
* ''The Burslem Boys'', Barewall Art Gallery, Burslem, Stoke-on-Trent, 19 October 2012 – 3 November 2012; exhibited alongside work of fellow Burslem School of Art students John Shelton and Norman Cope.''The Sentinel'', 19 October 2012,
Exhibition brings art school pals together
, 04/06/2013
* ''Lowry and Berry - Observers of Urban Life'', the
Potteries Museum & Art Gallery The Potteries Museum & Art Gallery is in Bethesda Street, Hanley, one of the six towns of Stoke-on-Trent in Staffordshire. Admission is free. One of the four local authority museums in the city, the other three being Gladstone Pottery Museum ...
, City Centre, Stoke-on-Trent, 25 July 2015 – 10 January 2016; a major exhibition where Arthur Berry is exhibited for the first time alongside the work of
L. S. Lowry Laurence Stephen Lowry ( ; 1 November 1887 – 23 February 1976) was an English artist. His drawings and paintings mainly depict Pendlebury, Lancashire (where he lived and worked for more than 40 years) as well as Salford and its vicinity ...
. * ''Unseen Works from The Estate of Arthur Berry'', The Foxlowe Arts Centre, Leek, Staffordshire Moorlands, 1 October 2016 – 12 November 2016. * ''Arthur Berry's Old Timers'', Barewall Art Gallery, Burslem, Stoke-on-Trent, 21 Jul 2018 - 16 Sept 2018.


References


External links

* Barewall is a Stoke-on-Trent based art gallery in Burslem and is the official outlet for Arthur Berry paintings, prints, books and CDS
Official dealers in Arthur Berry's paintings including those direct from the Estate of Arthur Berry
* Another two paintings


Arthur Berry and his connections with Brown Edge


Archived at Media Archive for Central England.
Recording of Arthur Berry reading his: "Lament for the Lost pubs of Burslem"
{{DEFAULTSORT:Berry, Arthur 20th-century English painters English male painters People from Smallthorne Alumni of Burslem School of Art Alumni of the Royal College of Art Academics of Staffordshire University People from Wolstanton 1925 births 1994 deaths 20th-century English dramatists and playwrights English male dramatists and playwrights 20th-century English male writers 20th-century English male artists