Edward Seago

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Edward Seago RBA ARWS RWS (31 March 19101974) was an English artist who painted in both oils and watercolours.

The son of a coal merchant, born in Norwich, Seago was a self-taught artist, (although he did receive advice from Sir Alfred Munnings and Bernard Priestman), and enjoyed a wide range of admirers from the British Royal family and The Aga Khan to the common man. His works have been classified as either Impressionist or Post-Impressionist and included landscapes, seascapes, skyscapes, street scenes, his garden and portraits.

Aged fourteen, he won an award from the Royal Drawing Society, and from then on knew what he wanted to do in spite of his parents' initial disapproval. At the age of eighteen, Seago joined Bevin's Travelling Show and subsequently toured with circuses in Britain and throughout Europe.

Heart problems, identified at the age of seven dogged him all of his life, and he had to resort to subterfuge to join the army at the outbreak of the Second World War. He was commissioned as a Major in the Royal Engineers and advised on camouflage techniques for Field Marshall Auchinleck, (with whom he had a life-long friendship).

Such was his popularity that those who wished to buy one of his paintings had to queue at his various annual exhibitions around the world (with the single exception of the late Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother).

Published works include: Circus Company (1933) Sons of Sawdust (1934) The Country Scene (1936 - forty-two paintings accompanying John Masefield's poetry) Tribute to the Ballet (1937 - again in conjunction with Masefield) A Generation Risen (1942) Peace in War (1943) High Endeavour (1944) With the Allied Armies in Italy (1945) A Canvas to Cover (1947 - Autobiography) With Capricorn to Paris (19??). Fifty-six of Edward Seago's paintings can be viewed on: www.johnfuller.org.uk/villages/brooke/PaintingsOfEdwardSeago.htm