David Emmanuel Noel is a London-born painter, illustrator and designer with a career that includes working on arts projects with local government bodies and charitable organisations such as the CAMBA, and the NSPCC. He is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts, with experience of the built environment, having worked with architects and professional institutes including the Royal Institute of British Architects, championing design quality and therapeutic benefits of art in public spaces. He was a director of the Brixton Artists Collective in the early 1990s and established Artsway Ltd, a promotion company for visual and performance artists in the UK, and continues to work with other artists on collaborative projects.
Artwork and career
David Emmanuel Noel studied art at college before pursuing undergraduate and post graduate study in the social sciences. He maintained an interest in the arts, particularly painting, and became successful selling work and securing commissions to pay his rent. In the early 1990s he went on to be involved in the Brixton Art Gallery in south London, exhibiting in the gallery's first advertised all-black male artist exhibition entitled From Where I Stand, and other public arts initiatives designed to create platforms for cross disciplinary collaboration. Working preferably in acrylics and oils, he has produced work of various styles which historically center on family, relationships, society and environmental issues.
Exhibitions and collaborations
He has exhibited widely and participated in several high-profile arts related events including The African and African-Caribbean Design Diaspora, and the Whole 9/Culver City Peace Project Arts initiative, launched in 2010 to raise awareness and funds for victims of war and environmental related disasters, particularly in Africa and Asia. Based in New York, he continues to exhibit, working with a variety of visual and performing artists such as RnB artist Lifford Shillingford. and composer Darryl Yokley, providing artwork for the albumPictures at an African Exhibition. released via Truth Revolution Records in early 2018. The album’s title points to its clear inspiration, Modest Mussorgsky's famed Pictures at an Exhibition where Mussorgsky composed music inspired by the artwork of his friend Viktor Hartmann. The artist produced artwork for the album cover and thirteen original pieces to accompany each album track. These featured as part of a live performance and installation at the Philadelphia Museum of Art and John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, Washington DC.