Hand Painted Jar Black Cat
 Hand Painted Jar Black Cat
 Hand Painted Jar Black Cat
 Hand Painted Jar Black Cat
 Hand Painted Jar Black Cat
 Hand Painted Jar Black Cat
 Hand Painted Jar Black Cat
 Hand Painted Jar Black Cat
 Hand Painted Jar Black Cat
 Hand Painted Jar Black Cat

Ponckle Fletcher Original Hand Painted Jar by the Cat Painter of St Ives Cornwall

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£80.00
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Ponckle Fletcher (British 1934-2012)

An original hand painted glass jar by Ponckle renowned Cornwall artist known as the cat painter of St Ives.

This jar features a black cat perched upon sunflower in vibrant yellow, painted upon a sparkled blue ground.

Signed Ponckle 96.

Measurements: 11cm in height x 7cm diameter.

Free UK Delivery.

About the artist:

Ponckle was a popular artist in St Ives and an eccentric character on the St Ives art scene for over thirty years. Her gallery on Island Square was the scene of a prolific artistic career which resulted in national and international commercial success. Ponckle’s Gallery was also the social hub of the artistic community in the Cornish seaside town with a rich cultural heritage going back to the 1950s.

Ponckle was born in Chingford in 1934, the oldest girl of five siblings. From an early age, she showed signs of being the black sheep of the family and embracing the role with relish. She showed artistic talent and a rebellious streak that both took her in an entirely different direction to the rest of her family.  At 17 she met and fell in love with well-known jazz pianist and arranger Ken Moule, who immediately renamed her ‘Ponckle’ (a name she kept for the rest of her life, eventually changing it by deed poll) and asked her to marry him. He also recorded a song in her honour, “Son of Ponckle.” She later moved to Paris, where she worked as a stylist for the Katherine Dunham Dance Company. Her constant restlessness led to divorce from Ken Moule.

Ponckle then married photographer Trevor Clark in 1964 and had two sons, Gavin and Jake. They moved to Mallorca in 1969, where Trevor became a travel photographer. Ponckle was his stylist and she also began making large fabric collage portraits. After seven years, she and her sons moved back to England and she divorced Trevor. She continued making fabric portraits and had a one-person show at the Courtauld Institute in London in 1974.

Ponckle moved with her sons to St Ives in 1978. She opened a gallery in her house in Norway Lane, exhibiting her quirky paintings of local scenes, gradually making a name for herself. In 1985 she opened Ponckle’s Gallery on Island Square and started painting cats with views of St Ives. This was the most prolific period in her career and she was selling her paintings as fast as she could produce them. Ponckle’s Gallery became an important social and artistic meeting place; the terrace was a riot of colour, flowers and jazz music and there was never a dull moment. Ponckle became friends with local artists Hyman Segal, Max Barrett and Patrick Hughes. Other regular visitors to the gallery were Molly Parkin, who lived locally, and George Melly, a regular performer at the St Ives September Festival whom Ponckle knew from her London jazz days.

In 2004 Ponckle had a stroke, which rendered her severely disabled. She sold the gallery and continued painting at home, her illness having a profound effect on her painting style, which became more quirky and spatially jumbled. However, the paintings were well received and, while she had ceased to sell her work, she left a collection of paintings seen by some as her finest work.