Guyanese artist Frank Bowling receives honour of Knight Bachelor from Queen

Guyana-born artist, Frank Bowling OBE RA, had the honour of Knight Bachelor being conferred upon him in the Birthday 2020 Honours List by Her Majesty The Queen.

Frank Bowling in his South London studio

The Birthday Honours list recognises the achievements of a wide range of extraordinary people across the United Kingdom.
During his six-decade-long career, Bowling’s relentless pursuit of excellence in painting underpins a lifetime of service to British art. Bowling, originally from Bartica, Region Seven (Cuyuni-Mazaruni) is currently one of the leading British painters alive today and at age 86, is still an active painter with an irrepressible work ethic, working in his studio almost every day.
Sir Frank in a press release said, “I’ve set out on a quest to explore the possibilities of paint, and I find myself making something new every time. I have an insatiable determination to experiment with colour, form and process, to create new and original artworks that push the boundaries of the medium, while being intellectually grounded in post-war abstraction. The things that paint can achieve are so vast and diverse that I don’t think I’ll ever be done with it.”
Having been trained in the English art school tradition, Bowling, who moved to England in 1953, added “…my identity as a British artist has always been crucial to me and I have viewed London as my home since arriving in 1953 from what was then British Guiana. To be recognised for my contribution to British painting and art history with a knighthood makes me extremely proud. Friends and family have played a role in my studio since the 1960s – as a husband, father, grandfather and recently a great-grandfather. I am honoured to sit at the centre of a modern family to whom I feel much gratitude.”
Meanwhile, his sons Ben and Sacha Bowling, who are also his studio directors, said “often described by critics as a late modern master, in many ways, recognition has come late in our father’s career. We are delighted he is getting this distinction now for his contribution to the canon of contemporary and modern art…The whole family is overjoyed at this news. We couldn’t be prouder of all that our father has achieved.”
Over the past sixty years, Frank Bowling’s large-scale abstract canvases have explored the nature and possibilities of paint and pursued forms of expression, which are both nuanced and open-ended. In May 2019, a major retrospective of his work, subtitled “The Possibilities of Paint Are Never-Ending”, opened at Tate Britain to outstanding critical acclaim.