How you can use this image
This image can be used for non-commercial research or private study purposes, and other UK exceptions to copyright permitted to users based in the United Kingdom under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988, as amended and revised. Any other type of use will need to be cleared with the rights holder(s).
Review the copyright credit lines that are located underneath the image, as these indicate who manages the copyright (©) within the artwork, and the photographic rights within the image.
The collection that owns the artwork may have more information on their own website about permitted uses and image licensing options.
Review our guidance pages which explain how you can reuse images, how to credit an image and how to find images in the public domain or with a Creative Commons licence available.
Notes
Add or edit a note on this artwork that only you can see. You can find notes again by going to the ‘Notes’ section of your account.
Ron Pett and his wife, Jessie, share the same bedroom in which he was born in 1935, in the 17th-century living accommodation belonging to the butcher’s shop in Rotherfield, East Sussex, which was started by his grandfather in 1928. With the help of his cousin Ray, Ron has been running the family business since he took over the financial reins a quarter of a century ago. The business today is certainly nothing like it was in grandfather Pett’s time, when a travelling slaughterman called Sixy Minns served local farms and chicken were killed in the back room. The third generation of Pett butchers have seen considerable change too. They enjoyed long periods of rising prosperity as the village grew from 2,500 to 3,500, and the car brought in trade from the surrounding countryside.
You don’t need to decipher supermarket small print at G. Pett and Sons. You know that lamb, pork and poultry are sourced locally, and beef comes from Scotland. However, these days, far fewer great sides of beef are shouldered into the shop, and a lot of the meat arrives already butchered into smaller, less recognisable packages. Many incomers eschew the slower ways of village life, preferring one-stop shopping, except for special orders for high days and holidays – rather like church attendance – and, as a result, the two other butcher’s shops in Rotherfield have long since gone. Gone too are the High Street baker, grocer, sweetshop, mens' hairdressers and petrol pump. Antique shops, though, spring up everywhere.
Ron says: 'We offer the highest quality meat and personal service, but that isn’t necessarily what everyone wants these days. A lot of people prefer to shop incognito, with only the check-out person knowing what’s gone into their basket. We don’t do too badly, though. We are nowhere near survival level. But there is no generation of Pett's coming along who want to go into the business. Who knows whether it will survive after Ray and I have retired.'
Title
Ron and Ray Pett, Butchers
Date
2000
Medium
oil on panel
Measurements
H 126 x W 100 cm
Accession number
487
Acquisition method
on loan from the Royal Society of Portrait Painters
Work type
Painting