Yankel Feather

Welcome, so may welcomes to the website featuring Yankel Feathers beautiful art - this website features just some of Yankels artwork which is for sale, if you would like to arrange a private viewing, or are interested in holding an exhibition please do drop me an email on kate@mynaturalhappiness.com.  

Yankel exhibited his paintings for decades, and anyone who visited any of his exhibitions will remember how many incredible stories he had and how much he captivated his audiences, until he was bored of you of course and then he told you so before moving onto the next thing in his life.  

Yankel was a British painter, a member of the Liverpool Academy of Arts and the Newlyn Society of Artists. Paintings by Yankel Feather are in the public collections of the Royal Pavillion in Brighton, and the Walker Art Gallery.  

Born in Liverpool in 1920, Yankel Feather would have had a difficult childhood, being the youngest of seven children in a family struggling against poverty, with his mother at the helm in light of his father’s absence. His difficult upbringing turned him towards painting and shaped him into the artist he would one day become.  Indeed, it was after numerous visits to the Walker Art Gallery following the death of his mother when he was just 14, that he first began painting, and thus found his escape from the hardship of his past.      

Yankel Feather (1920 - 2009)  Having served in the Highland Light Infantry during the Second World War, his early adulthood was a struggle to make ends meet whilst trying to pursue a career as an artist. In 1947, he met artist, Sir Terry Frost, the man who would play an important part in Feather’s own journey to become an established artist, both as a close friend and a critic of his work.      

The city of Liverpool also played a great part in Feather’s personal and professional identity. Here in the 1960s, he met fellow North West artist, L.S Lowry, and was inspired by his paintings of the industrial North West of England. Such pieces influenced his own paintings of working class Liverpool that depicted the likes of the Mersey dockside and industrial wastelands.        

In the 1960s and 70s, Feather became a well-known face on the Merseybeat scene, owning nightclubs that were regularly frequented by his famous friends; Cilla Black, The Beatles, and Brian Epstein, to name just a few. Feather was to covet one of his paintings that was slashed by John Lennon when being evicted from ‘The Basement’ coffee bar and club. His busy social life helped boost his professional profile around the Liverpool area, with Ringo Star being just one of the famous Liverpudlians who bought some of Feather’s work.  

In 1977, he swapped urban Liverpool for the rocky cliffs of Cornwall, as he retired near his lifelong friend, Terry Frost. His later paintings were a far cry from the industrial Merseyside scenes and crowded dancehalls that he depicted in his earlier years whilst he was a club owner. Instead, he explored the dramatic Cornish landscapes and seascapes, as well as the beachfronts of southern seaside towns such as Brighton. Feather finally settled in Brighton, setting up a studio with his partner and painting mainly from memory. On Feather’s death in 2009 his remaining works remained in the studio until his partner Terry Arbuckle's passing in 2022.