About Beryl

Influenced by amongst others, Stanley Spencer and Edward Burra, Beryl almost single-handedly promoted the ideal that humorous art had real merit and could be collectable. Her saucy humour, never malicious but always accurate, immediately struck a chord with the general public and the fact that her pictures have been collected and enjoyed for over thirty years is a testament to the true integrity of her painting as uniquely, Beryl painted solely for herself and no-one else. If a subject or incident amused her or captured her imagination she painted it and, having done so, she enjoyed that picture as much as anyone. For this reason paintings often remained in her possession for many months after they were finished. She painted what she wanted, not what anyone else wanted, but above all she painted ordinary people having a good time.
Famously publicity-shy (she was awarded the OBE in 1995 and received it in a private civil ceremony in Plymouth, not from a member of the Royal Family at Buckingham Palace) her low profile enabled her to sit quietly in a pub or café and discreetly observe and record the activity around her.

For Beryl Cook her pictures had a life of their own and she once famously said ‘ I don’t know how my pictures happen. They just do. They exist, but for the life of me I can’t explain them’. That they did and that they brought such delight to so many is enough explanation for us all.