The Artist's House and His Works - Sir Alfred Munnings

From the collection of

East Anglian Film Archive at the University of East Anglia
The East Anglian Film Archive, the UK's first regional film archive, offers a unique record of the East of England's social and cultural history. As part of the University of East Anglia, we continue to lead moving image heritage research and inspire audience participation through community projects and events. Our collections represent a broad range of amateur and professional creativity, from 1896 to the present day.

The Artist's House and His Works - Sir Alfred Munnings


A peek inside the Munnings Art Museum in Dedham, Essex, a memorial to England's finest painter of horses, known as the artist who hated Picasso.

The home of the artist Sir Alfred Munnings is now a museum open to the public. Anglia Television take a look around Castle House, bought by Munnings in 1919 and used, along with the adjoining studio as Munnings place of work until his death in 1959. Lady Munnings (Sir Alfred's second wife, Violet) was determined that, when her husband passed on, Castle House should be a memorial to her late husband.

Munnings, born 1878 in Mendham, Suffolk was known for painting rural scenes in a traditional style, and was an outspoken critic of Modernism, unofficially given the title ‘the artist who hated Picasso'. Munnings died in 1959, and Castle House was opened as the Munnings Art Museum in the early 1960s.


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