Rosa Branson MBE was born in 1933, and for over 60 years has been painting and designing fabrics. She specialises in the Old Masters oil painting technique of layering subtle glazes of translucent paint over each other.
Her paintings include portraiture, still life, landscape, and large-scale charity paintings for charitable organisations including Oxfam, the Red Cross, the Salvation Army, and the Taxi Charity for Military Veterans.
Rosa began work on a huge painting depicting the work of the Taxi Charity in 2008. The finished picture includes vignettes of all aspects of charity life; taxis going to events in procession, veterans at Taxi Charity events, scenes from the war, the Taxi Patron Dame Vera Lynn, the lyrics sheet for her most famous song, We’ll Meet Again, and the members of the cab trade and the committee who run the charity.
The finished work which was completed when the charity was still called the London Taxi Benevolent Association for the War Disabled, hangs outside the Mayors Parlour, on the first floor of Worthing Town Hall, the seaside town that the Taxi Charity has been visiting every year since 1948.
The Worshipful the Mayor of Worthing, Councillor Lionel Harman, said “The Taxi Charity picture is one of two paintings by Rosa Branson we have in the Town Hall here in Worthing and we consider ourselves to be fortunate to have them.
The other celebrates 100 years of Women in Politics and they both generate a great deal of interest from visitors to the Town Hall. The Taxi Charity Painting is a favourite of mine, and I know from reading letters from Rosa to the council, it was special to her, as her Father was killed in Burma, so this was in some way her own personal tribute to him.
The painting is on show outside the Mayor's office and is the starting point for Mayoral tours of the Town Hall.
As I am also the Armed Forces Champion for the council it is great to have this painting in a prime position. The Borough is honoured to welcome the veterans to the Town every year and applaud the Taxi Divers who give up their time to give them a great day out and the charity that does great work supporting them.”
Dick Goodwin, Vice President, Taxi Charity for Military Veterans, said, “My wife and I visited Rosa at her home in Highgate several times. She is a fantastic raconteur and we thoroughly enjoyed spending time getting to know her. It was an honour that Rosa painted such a magnificent piece representing the work of the Taxi Charity which really captures the spirit of the charity and the friendship between cabbies and veterans.”
A new biography “Rosa Branson A Portrait” was published on 10 March 2021, Rosa’s 88th birthday.
A discounted copy is available for pre order directly from the publishers by visiting www.linen-press.com/shop/rosa-branson-a-portrait
You can follow Rosa Branson on Facebook www.facebook.com/theworlingtonmovementrosabransonstudio
About Rosa Branson
Rosa Branson MBE was born 1933 and is a second cousin of business magnate, investor, author, and philanthropist. Sir Richard Branson.
Rosa graduated from the Camberwell School of Art as a painter, and after studying at the Slade School, she trained under Professor Helmut Ruhemann, the Chief Restorer of the National Gallery, and spent six years copying works by the Old Masters at the National Gallery in London. Rosa's work first found recognition in her early 20s when she was admitted to the prestigious Royal Academy. Over the last 60 years, Rosa has produced over 600 paintings.
She received the MBE for services to art and charity in the 2010 New Year's Honours
About the Taxi Charity
The Taxi Charity is run by volunteer London licensed taxi drivers and has been supporting hundreds of veterans since 1948. The charity arranges free trips to, the Netherlands, Belgium and France, and days out to museums, concerts, or fundraising events in the UK, to catch up with friends and comrades.
For the last twelve months, pandemic restrictions have meant their events have had to be cancelled so the Charity has made a huge effort to ensure veterans have received regular contact; sending out a greeting card each month, gifts to mark the 75th anniversaries of VE and VJ day, stockings at Christmas and arranging Guards of Honour at veteran’s funerals. Volunteers have also helped with; regular phone calls, food shopping, transport to hospital appointments, and more recently taking veterans for their Coronavirus injections.
To fund and facilitate their work, the charity is reliant on generous donations from members of the public, businesses and trusts.
For more information, to arrange interviews or to request images please contact
Christina Bowden
Bowden PR
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