Agathe Sorel (born 1935, Budapest)[1] is a London-based artist of Hungarian descent, specializing in painting, sculpture, printmaking and livres d’artiste.[2] She is a Member of the Royal Watercolour Society and the Royal Society of Painter-Printmakers, as well as a founding member of the Printmakers Council and was its Chairman in 1981-1983.[3] She was one of the first artists who experimented with making objects and sculptures using print techniques.[4]
After returning to London in 1960, Sorel set up her own studio in Fulham with her husband, painter and designer Gabor Sitkey, and began teaching at Camberwell and Maidstone Colleges.[7] In 1965, she became a founding member of the Printmaker’s Council.[3] The following year, in 1966, Sorel won a Churchill fellowship to travel to the United States and Mexico for two years.[1][6] After that, she became interested in working with transparent materials and the use of Perspex allowed her to combine line engraving properties with 3D forms.[5] Most of her sculpture is engineered Perspex with both hand and machine engraving.[4]
In 1981-1983 Sorel chaired the Printmaker’s Council.[3]
In collaboration with the poet David Gascoyne Sorel made an artist book The Book of Sand published in 2001.[8] The book was a mixture of poetry and printed drawings.[4]
Her work was featured in several exhibitions at key galleries and museums, including the Bankside Gallery.[9]
^Dunlap, Katherine (20 July 1968). "Museum Adds New Art". The Philadelphia Inquirer at Newspapers.com. p. 19. Archived from the original on 15 May 2021. Retrieved 15 May 2021.