Thorpe Prints

One Love
One Love
44 x 30
Winters Song
13 x 28
In a Crowd
In a Crowd
26x26
At Sea
At Sea
30x30
Pigeons
Pigeons
30x30
Once in a Blue Moon
Once in a Blue Moon
30x30
Last One Gets the Beer In
Last One Gets the Beer In
13x52
The Meek
The Meek
24x32
Strange Fruit
Strange Fruit
11x8.5
The Forgotten
The Forgotten
46x34
Bringer of Sunshine
Bringer of Sunshine
21 x 12.5
Over Love
Over Love
46x36
Forest of Love
Forest of Love
36x28
In Pain
In Pain
16x16
Wishes on the Wind
20 x 20
In the Sound of the Siren
In the Sound of the Siren
30x40.5
Holding onto Love
Holding onto Love
35x15.75
Me and My Boat
Me and My Boat
15x 35.5
Adagio
Adagio
19x30
A Walk in the Park
A Walk in the Park
30x26.5
Time Without Shadows
Time Without Shadows
23.5x20.5
One Beat of Your Heart
One Beat of Your Heart
19x36
The Innocents
The Innocent
24x33.5
Man Crying
Man Crying
24x30
Mates
Mates
18x18
Blessed
Blessed
29.5x40
Under a Moon
Under a Moon
25x25
With Love in the Snow
28 x 20.25
Three Dogs in a Boat
25x27.5
Falling in Love
Falling in Love
16x16
Ave
Ave
30x24

Internationally renowned artist Mackenzie Thorpe was raised in the industrial town of Middlesbrough in the 1950s, where his father worked as a laborer and his mother as an auxiliary nurse.  Life for the Thorpe family was no different to that of most of their community – at times a struggle. Mackenzie acknowledges mixed emotions about this period in his life.  He remembers the strong feeling of community spirit, the warmth and humor that flourished in the face of adversity, as well as the loneliness and isolation.

The need and compulsion to draw was obvious from an early age and remains with Mackenzie today.  As a child, he would seek out whatever raw materials he could find, drawing on cigarette packs with stubs of pencils, or using eye-shadow and lipstick illicitly obtained from his mum’s makeup bag.  Struggling from dyslexia throughout his childhood, Mackenzie found confidence in painting and drawing.  Unsurprisingly, he left school without formal qualifications, taking on a variety of manual, unskilled jobs while continuing to draw and paint.

Mackenzie eventually got the courage to enter the local art college.  His lack of education and a barely readable application did nothing to warrant support, but the strength and volume of work that Mackenzie presented, coupled with his enthusiasm and commitment, won him a place at the Middlesbrough College of Art and, subsequently, the Byam Shaw School of Art in London.

After leaving art school, he spent several years working with inner-city children in London before moving to North Yorkshire to set up a studio, as well as his own gallery with his wife, Susan, and children, Owen and Chloe.  Since then, he has become one of the world's most collected and sought-after artists.  His works express an entire range of human emotion, from the special bond of love and friendship, to the importance of self-reflection and individual triumphs.  His works are a tribute to the creativity within us all and are a vivid expression of hope and the human spirit.

Mackenzie's perspective on life is clear.  He doesn’t hide the fact that often life is a struggle, a dark tunnel which can seem endless.  However, he passionately believes that our frail dreams are worth nurturing and that love and honesty will triumph over adversity.