Painter, draughtsman and sculptor, born in Leeds, Yorkshire, whose lifetime’s work, reflecting and developing from many aspects of European Modernism, emerged following a fire at his home in Chapel Allerton, in the city, in 1999. Until then, only his close family knew of Woodrow’s output. Within a few years it was getting national press publicity, Woodrow being hailed as a lost modern master. His parents were of Polish background, marrying in Boston, America. On moving to Leeds, Joash’s father worked as a Hebrew scholar and bookseller before settling into the textile trade. Several of the eight sons and two daughters became distinguished academics, Julius a nuclear scientist at Harwell, Joseph a professor of medicine in Liverpool. Joash attended Leeds College of Art; served in the Army as a cartographer, 1945–8; then between 1950–3 studied drawing and painting at the Royal College of Art, fellow-students and friends including Frank Auerbach, Peter Blake and the novelist Len Deighton.

Text source: 'Artists in Britain Since 1945' by David Buckman (Art Dictionaries Ltd, part of Sansom & Company)


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