'As supermarkets clump across the land, small shops disappear and the artist Alfred Cohen mourns their passing', observed journalist Philip Oakes. In the 1980s and 1990s Cohen started painting shop-fronts, especially in seaside towns, 'all too often […] within weeks of their being demolished', he lamented. Fortunately, the Life-Boat Café still looks out over the beach at Cromer in Norfolk. As the flags and the cuisine suggest, this picture is about quintessential Englishness. But there is a humour in all those signs. George Myerson writes of it: 'This is the loveliest painting of writing that I know'.
Alfred Cohen: An American Artist in Europe - Between Figuration and Abstraction
Forthcoming exhibition