George Vicat Cole
George Vicat Cole (17 April 1833 – 6 April 1893), was an English painter.
Biography
Cole was born at Portsmouth, the son of the landscape painter, George Cole (1810-1883), and in his practice followed his father's lead with marked success. He exhibited at the British Institution at the age of nineteen, and was first represented at the Royal Academy in 1853. His election as an associate of this institution took place in 1870, and he became an Academician ten years later. He died in London on 6 April 1893. The wide popularity of his work was due partly to the simple directness of his technical method, and partly to his habitual choice of attractive material.
Most of his subjects were found in the counties of Surrey and Sussex, and along the banks of the Thames. One of his largest pictures, The Pool of London, was bought by the Chantrey Fund Trustees in 1888, and is now in the Tate Gallery.
He was the father of the painter Rex Vicat Cole. He may have been related to the society portraitist Philip Tennyson Cole.[1]
See Robert Chignell, The Life and Paintings of Vicat Cole, R.A. (London, 1899).
References
- R. Chignell, The Life and Paintings of Vicat Cole, RA (1896).
- T. Barringer, The Cole Family: Painters of the English Landscape, 1838-1975 (exhibition catalogue, Portsmouth, 1988).
- James Dafforne, "British artists: their style and character: No. CXII - Vicat Cole ARA", Art Journal, 1870, pp.177-9.
- H. Schutz Wilson, "Our living artists: Vicat Cole RA" Magazine of Art, vol.1, 1878.
[Anon] "Celebrities at home, no.CCCXCIX: Mr Vicat Cole at Little Campden House, Kensington", The World 6 May 1885.
- Obituary, Times, 29 April 1893.
- Rex Vicat Cole, The Artistic Anatomy of Trees, 1916.
- C. Payne, Toil and Plenty: Images of the Agricultural Landscape in England, 1870-1890, 1993, pp.120-122.
- Cole Papers (private collection, UK).
- ↑ "Mr. Tennyson Cole". The Mercury (Hobart, Tas. : 1860 - 1954) (Hobart, Tas.: National Library of Australia). 29 November 1890. p. 2. Retrieved 25 October 2014.
External links
- Attribution
- This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
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