








David Hyde, a wooded interior, oil on board
David Hyde (1947 to 2012) A Northamptonshire landscape, oil on board, signed below right, within a gilt frame with a linen slip.
Dimensions: 24 cm x 17.5 cm, with frame: 37 cm x 27.5 cm
David Hyde was born on the Isle of Wight in 1932 and trained by Robin Goodwin alongside the wildlife artist David Shepherd. He is best known for his landscape studies focusing especially on the Northamptonshire countryside. David exhibited widely in the UK and overseas and his work was bought and admired by members of the British royal family. He received a posthumous retrospective at the Headquarters of the Duchy of Cornwall in Buckingham Gate, London at the permission of the then Prince of Wales, now King Charles III.
David Hyde (1947 to 2012) A Northamptonshire landscape, oil on board, signed below right, within a gilt frame with a linen slip.
Dimensions: 24 cm x 17.5 cm, with frame: 37 cm x 27.5 cm
David Hyde was born on the Isle of Wight in 1932 and trained by Robin Goodwin alongside the wildlife artist David Shepherd. He is best known for his landscape studies focusing especially on the Northamptonshire countryside. David exhibited widely in the UK and overseas and his work was bought and admired by members of the British royal family. He received a posthumous retrospective at the Headquarters of the Duchy of Cornwall in Buckingham Gate, London at the permission of the then Prince of Wales, now King Charles III.
David Hyde (1947 to 2012) A Northamptonshire landscape, oil on board, signed below right, within a gilt frame with a linen slip.
Dimensions: 24 cm x 17.5 cm, with frame: 37 cm x 27.5 cm
David Hyde was born on the Isle of Wight in 1932 and trained by Robin Goodwin alongside the wildlife artist David Shepherd. He is best known for his landscape studies focusing especially on the Northamptonshire countryside. David exhibited widely in the UK and overseas and his work was bought and admired by members of the British royal family. He received a posthumous retrospective at the Headquarters of the Duchy of Cornwall in Buckingham Gate, London at the permission of the then Prince of Wales, now King Charles III.