Eric Tucker
Eric Tucker was an English painter and draughtsman. He is best known for his depictions of working class social life in industrial North West England.
He received no formal art education and left school at 14, working variously as a boxer, a steelworker, a gravedigger and a building labourer. Unknown during his lifetime, he made very few attempts to sell or show his work. Few beyond close family were aware that he painted.
His work came to public attention following his death in 2018, when he left behind a hoard of more than 400 paintings, and thousands of drawings, in his house in Warrington. Visitors queued around the block to see a two-day exhibition at Tucker's house. Following this, a retrospective at Warrington Museum & Art Gallery in 2019 attracted record numbers of visitors to the gallery.
Critics have compared Tucker to Edward Burra, L. S. Lowry, James Ensor, Julian Trevelyan and Eric Ravilious. Art critic Ruth Millington described Tucker's work as a 'significant contribution to modern British art'.