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Glen Baxter

born 1944

Pecos Bill had a ‘Thing’ about Household Dust 1978
© Glen Baxter
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In Tate Britain

Prints and Drawings Rooms

6 artworks by Glen Baxter
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Biography

Glen Baxter (born 4 March 1944) is an English draughtsman and artist, noted for his absurdist drawings and an overall effect often resembling literary nonsense.

Born in Leeds, Baxter was trained at Leeds College of Art (1960-5). He was a teacher at the V&A (1967–74). His first solo exhibition was held at New York's Gotham Book Mart Gallery. Baxter's artwork has appeared in The New Yorker, Vanity Fair and The Independent on Sunday. His images and their corresponding captions employ art and language inspired by pulp fiction and adventure comics with intellectual jokes and references. His simple line-drawings often feature cowboys, gangsters, explorers and schoolchildren, who utter incongruous intellectual statements regarding art and philosophy. One of his best known satirical works, The Impending Gleam, was first published in 1981.

Today the artist lives and works in London. With Flowers Gallery, Baxter has had a number of solo shows including Furtive Loomings (2017), Tofu Walk With Me (2015), and Glen Baxter: The Soul in Torment, Parts I & II (2012).

In August 2014, Baxter was one of 200 public figures who were signatories to a letter to The Guardian expressing their hope that Scotland would vote to remain part of the United Kingdom in September's referendum on that issue.

In May 2016, The New York Review of Books published a collection of Baxter's work titled, Almost Completely Baxter: New and Selected Blurtings.

This biography is from Wikipedia under an Attribution-ShareAlike Creative Commons License. Spotted a problem? Let us know.

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Artworks

Left Right
  • It was Henderson’s Sixth Attempt at Lasagne

    Glen Baxter
    1978
    View by appointment
  • Seth’s Snood was the Envy of the Boys in the Bunkhouse

    Glen Baxter
    1978
    View by appointment
  • The Twins Devoted an Hour Each Day to the Walnut

    Glen Baxter
    1978
    View by appointment
  • The Twins Introduced the Imposter

    Glen Baxter
    1978
    View by appointment
  • ‘To me the window is still a symbolically loaded motif’ Drawled Cody

    Glen Baxter
    1978
    View by appointment
  • ‘To my mind there’s no finer sight than kale moving at speed’ Opined Millward

    Glen Baxter
    1978
    View by appointment
  • Pecos Bill had a ‘Thing’ about Household Dust

    Glen Baxter
    1978
Artwork
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