logo
‘Ordinary people enjoying themselves': Beryl Cook exhibition to open in Plymouth

‘Ordinary people enjoying themselves': Beryl Cook exhibition to open in Plymouth

The Guardian20-06-2025
She was a seaside landlady who left school at 14 and who, without any formal training, became one of Britain's most popular artists. Now, 17 years after Beryl Cook's death, her home city of Plymouth will this week announce a major exhibition that will include previously unseen works as well as much-loved humorous paintings with larger-than-life characters.
Cook was chronically shy and avoided her exhibition openings – and would probably have stayed away from the show at The Box from January 2026.
Spanning her entire career, it will feature loans from private and public owners, including her family. It will explore her significance in portraying 'ordinary people enjoying themselves', with both comedy and compassion.
Among the paintings that have not been publicly exhibited before is Bingo, in which a woman in a bingo hall has just won a game, raising her hand in glee as a nearby woman gives her a classic Cook side-eye.
It was acquired last year by The Box, whose collections include a film and television archive, on which its curator, Terah Walkup, has drawn, linking Cook's images to actual places.
She has, for example, identified the Plymouth bingo hall and the exact moment of inspiration for Bingo: 'It was from a news clip on local television about the popularity of bingo. In one scene, a woman throws her hands up in the air celebrating a winning card, while women behind her cast a side-eye …
'Beryl had a notoriously photographic memory, so it could have been that she remembered this particular scene or seeing it on the local television. It changes the way that we might think about this classic humorous work.
'This particular film clip wasn't just about bingo halls. It was actually about the sociability of older women. It was about how women found space in order to meet each other, socialise, spend money and have a sense of independence in the 1980s.'
The artist had in fact worried that her caricatures would offend the real-life people who had inspired them, according to her daughter-in-law, who in the early 1970s lived in the basement of Cook's modest terrace house on the Hoe.
Teresa Cook told the Guardian: 'She did worry to start with. She was nervous. Actually, that's why the fan letters helped so much. People can recognise themselves or they feel they've seen somebody that looks like that … Beryl realised that there was no offence in the art and people were genuinely so happy to see her art.'
Sophie Cook, the artist's granddaughter, said that because the caricatures were never cruel, 'people loved being in the paintings.'
Recalling an earlier exhibition, she said: 'The major comment from every staff member was the laughter that everyone could hear … You can be having a bad day, you go and have a look at a Beryl Cook exhibition and I guarantee your day just got better.'
She spoke of a new fanbase for Cook's art, that the family receives correspondence from people – particularly young people – who love it.
The family hopes it is only a matter of time before the Tate shows her properly. Despite her popularity with the public, the gallery's former director declared in 1996 that 'there will be no Beryl Cooks in Tate Modern,' although she was in a 2010 group show at Tate Britain.
Sign up to Art Weekly
Your weekly art world round-up, sketching out all the biggest stories, scandals and exhibitions
after newsletter promotion
Julian Spalding, former director of galleries in Sheffield, Manchester and Glasgow, criticised modern art museums 'who wouldn't go near Beryl with a barge pole, even though part of their job is preserving art history'.
In his 2023 book Art Exposed, he argued: 'Beryl's work merits a place in any public collection.'
He was among her earliest fans, after seeing her painting of two weary middle-aged women in a museum cafe, 'easing their sore ankles out of the pinching heels of their shoes, with blissful relief spreading across their faces'.
He observed: 'No troubling art to look at any more, just a cup of tea and a seat. What an earthy response to a gallery visit … She was, I thought, a genuine artist of our time.'
Teresa Cook said: 'She did a few paintings of me, and I loved them all.'
They include Elvira's Café, about which Cook once said: 'This is a picture of my son and daughter-in-law's cafe, in which they serve sausage sandwiches, amongst other things … Here you see one about to be tackled by the lady in front, with Teresa enjoying the view she had of one of the many handsome marines who frequent the cafe, for they are stationed in barracks just around the corner. In the summer they sometimes arrive in sporting gear, like this vest and tiny shorts.'
Walkup noted that the Tate had been supportive of this exhibition: 'This is the most extensive exhibition of Beryl Cook's work to date, a landmark show.
'It's all about recasting Beryl's career and showing that she's quite radical, particularly to do with identity and representation. Beryl was painting those who have been overlooked by society.'
The exhibition draws on Cook's previously unpublished letters. In one, she wrote: 'Instead of doing housework, I go upstairs and start painting.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

OBITUARY Terence Stamp, actor who played Superman villain Zod, dies at 87
OBITUARY Terence Stamp, actor who played Superman villain Zod, dies at 87

Reuters

time27 minutes ago

  • Reuters

OBITUARY Terence Stamp, actor who played Superman villain Zod, dies at 87

LONDON, Aug 17 (Reuters) - Terence Stamp liked to recall how he was on the verge of becoming a tantric sex teacher at an ashram in India when, in 1977, he received a telegram from his London agent with news that he was being considered for the "Superman" film. "I was on the night flight the next day," Stamp said in an interview with his publisher Watkins Books in 2015. After eight years largely out of work, getting the role of the arch-villain General Zod in "Superman" and "Superman II" turned the full glare of Hollywood's limelight on the Londoner. Buoyed by his new role, Stamp said he would respond to curious looks from passers-by with a command of: "Kneel before Zod, you bastards," which usually went down a storm. He died on Sunday morning, aged 87, his family said in a statement. The cause was not immediately known. "He leaves behind an extraordinary body of work, both as an actor and as a writer that will continue to touch and inspire people for years to come," the family statement said. Terence Henry Stamp was born in London's East End in 1938, the son of a tugboat coal stoker and a mother who Stamp said gave him his zest for life. As a child he endured the bombing of the city during World War Two and the deprivations that followed. "The great blessing of my life is that I had the really hard bit at the beginning because we were really poor," he said. He left school to work initially as a messenger boy for an advertising firm and quickly moved up the ranks before he won a scholarship to go to drama school. Until then he had kept his acting ambitions secret from his family for fear of disapproval. "I couldn't tell anyone I wanted to be an actor because it was out of the question. I would have been laughed at," he said. He shared a flat with another young London actor, Michael Caine, and landed the lead role in director Peter Ustinov's 1962 adaptation of "Billy Budd", a story of brutality in the British navy in the 18th century. That role earned him an Academy Award nomination and filled him with pride. "To be cast by somebody like Ustinov was something that gave me a great deal of self-confidence in my film career," Stamp told the Thomson Reuters Foundation in 2019. "During the shooting, I just thought, 'Wow! This is it'." Famous for his good looks and impeccable dress sense, he formed one of Britain's most glamorous couples with Julie Christie, with whom he starred in "Far From the Madding Crowd" in 1967. But he said the love of his life was the model Jean Shrimpton. "When I lost her, then that also coincided with my career taking a dip," he said. After failing to land the role of James Bond to succeed Sean Connery, Stamp sought a change of scene. He appeared in Italian films and worked with Federico Fellini in the late 1960s. "I view my life really as before and after Fellini," he said. "Being cast by him was the greatest compliment an actor like myself could get." It was while working in Rome – where he appeared in Pier Paolo Pasolini's "Theorem" in 1968 and "A Season in Hell" in 1971 - that Stamp met Indian spiritual speaker and writer Jiddu Krishnamurti in 1968. Krishnamurti taught the Englishman how to pause his thoughts and meditate, prompting Stamp to study yoga in India. Mumbai was his base but he spent long periods at the ashram in Pune, dressed in orange robes and growing his hair long, while learning the teachings of his yogi, including tantric sex. "There was a rumour around the ashram that he was preparing me to teach the tantric group," he said in the 2015 interview with Watkins Books. "There was a lot of action going on." After landing the role of General Zod, the megalomaniacal leader of the Kryptonians, in "Superman" in 1978 and its sequel in 1980, both times opposite Christopher Reeves, he went on to appear in a string of other films, including as a transgender woman in "The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert" in 1994. Other films included "Valkyrie" with Tom Cruise in 2008, "The Adjustment Bureau" with Matt Damon in 2011 and movies directed by Tim Burton. He counted Princess Diana among his friends. "It wasn't a formal thing, we'd just meet up for a cup of tea, or sometimes we'd have a long chat for an hour. Sometimes it would be very quick," he told the Daily Express newspaper in 2017. "The time I spent with her was a good time." In 2002, Stamp married for the first time at the age of 64 -- to Elizabeth O'Rourke, a pharmacist, who was 35 years his junior. They divorced in 2008. Asked by the Stage 32 website how he got film directors to believe in his talent, Stamp said: "I believed in myself. "Originally, when I didn't get cast I told myself there was a lack of discernment in them. This could be considered conceit. I look at it differently. Cherishing that divine spark in myself."

Terence Stamp dies aged 87
Terence Stamp dies aged 87

Telegraph

time27 minutes ago

  • Telegraph

Terence Stamp dies aged 87

Actor Terence Stamp has died aged 87, his family have said. The Oscar-nominated actor made his name in 1960s London and went on to play the arch-villain General Zod in Superman and Superman II. He also starred in films ranging from Pier Paolo Pasolini's Theorem in 1968 and A Season in Hell in 1971 to The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert in 1994, in which he played a transgender woman. His family said in a statement that he died on Sunday morning. They added: 'He leaves behind an extraordinary body of work, both as an actor and as a writer, that will continue to touch and inspire people for years to come. We ask for privacy at this sad time.' Born in London's East End in 1938, the son of a tugboat stoker, he endured the bombing of the city during the Second World War before leaving school to work in advertising, but then won a scholarship to go to drama school. Famous for his good looks and impeccable dress sense, he formed one of Britain's most glamorous couples with Julie Christie, with whom he starred in Far From the Madding Crowd in 1967. He also dated the model Jean Shrimpton and was chosen as a muse by photographer David Bailey. After failing to land the role of James Bond to succeed Sean Connery, he appeared in Italian films and worked with Federico Fellini in the late 1960s. He dropped out of the limelight and studied yoga in India before landing his most high-profile role as General Zod, the megalomaniacal leader of the Kryptonians, in Superman in 1978 and its sequel in 1980. He went on to appear in a string of other films, including Valkyrie with Tom Cruise in 2008, The Adjustment Bureau with Matt Damon in 2011 and movies directed by Tim Burton.

Blankety Blank player misses out on top prize after picking the wrong phrase – but would you have got it?
Blankety Blank player misses out on top prize after picking the wrong phrase – but would you have got it?

The Sun

time27 minutes ago

  • The Sun

Blankety Blank player misses out on top prize after picking the wrong phrase – but would you have got it?

A BLANKETY Blank contestant missed out on a top prize after choosing an incorrect phrase - but would you have got it? Hosted by Bradley Walsh, the beloved game show is going strong for the BBC in 2025. 4 4 4 Viewers watched as David narrowly missed out in one of the rounds. The contestant received the word Down, which was then followed by a blank. With three celebrities' help, David had to match their common phrases. He first selected Nish Kumar, who offered up the word "Hill", making Downhill. David then chose Shane Richie, who suggested "Town" to make Downtown. His final choice was Lesley Joseph, who put forward "Stairs", for Downstairs. David revealed to Bradley that he was considering "Under" as his choice. Locking that in as his answer, it was revealed Under was third most popular answer - for £500. The second most popular answer was Lesley's suggestion, Stairs, which would have been £750. Meanwhile, coming out on top was Town, Shane's choice - which was for a home decorating package. Blankety Blank viewers in shock after discovering winning contestant died after filming show Blankety Blank viewers were recently left shocked after discovering a contestant had sadly died. RAF veteran Nathanael Hill passed away after filming for the hit show took place. A tribute flashed up on screen to commemorate his life at the end of his episode. It came as viewers had just watched Nathanel winning the show's main prize. One person penned: "Jesus. RIP Nathaniel." A second said: "Well I don't normally bother with the credits at the end of #blanketyblank but that was a sad way to finish a jolly show." A third then commented: "Rest in perfect peace, Nathanael Hill." Blankety Blank airs on BBC One and iPlayer. 4

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store