Mike Jones (1941 – 9 January 2022) was a Welsh painter whose work was inspired by the coal miners and working people of South Wales.[1]
Born in 1941, Jones grew up in the village of Godrergraig, where his father was a coal miner (also running the Bird in Hand pub).[2] When Jones lost an eye at the age of nine, his surgeon suggested he start drawing to help improve his coordination.[3] Though he was encouraged to paint by his headmaster, Jones was discouraged from going to the nearby Swansea School of Art, with his parents preferring him to find a more reliable job.[2]
After becoming friends with painters Josef Herman and Will Roberts, Jones developed an interest in the subject of coal miners. He obsessively filled sketchbooks with drawings of local working people.[3] He became known as an important chronicler of working life in Wales and, in later life, a link to a former industrial life of the area.[2] He was championed by Mary Yapp and her gallery, the Albany Gallery in Cardiff, which held regular solo exhibitions.[2] The National Library of Wales holds examples of Jone's work. [4]
Jones' final exhibition was held to mark his 80th birthday, in October 2021 at Tŷ’r Gwrhyd, Pontardawe.[4]
Jones worked from an attic studio at his home in Pontardawe. He died on 9 January 2022, aged 80.[2]