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Elizabeth Forbes (artist)

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Elizabeth Forbes
Self-portrait about 1900
Born
Elizabeth Armstrong

(1859-12-29)29 December 1859
Died16 March 1912(1912-03-16) (aged 52)
Newlyn, England
NationalityCanadian-English
EducationSouth Kensington Art School
Known forPainter
MovementNewlyn School
SpouseStanhope Forbes
The Zandvoort Fishergirl, 1884, oil on canvas
School Is Out, 1889, oil on canvas
Across Mounts Bay, 1889+
The Leaf, 1897/1898, watercolour on paper
On a Fine Day, 1903, oil on canvas, Guildhall Art Gallery

Elizabeth Adela Forbes (née Armstrong; 29 December 1859 – 16 March 1912) was a Canadian painter who was primarily active in the UK. She often featured children in her paintings and School Is Out (painted in Newlyn) is one of her most popular works. She was friends with the artists James Abbott McNeill Whistler and Walter Sickert, both of whom influenced her work. Her etchings in particular are said to show the influence of Whistler.

After studying and working in continental Europe, Forbes settled in Newlyn, England where she raised her son and established a school with her husband, Stanhope Forbes. She had her works exhibited in notable shows and won medals for her works. Her paintings are in collections of museums in Canada, United States and England.

Personal life

Born in Kingston, Ontario, Elizabeth Armstrong was the youngest child of William Armstrong, an employee of the Government of Canada. Born in her father's old age, she was educated privately in Canada and then allowed to further her artistic studies in England with her mother as chaperone.[1][2] Her father died two months later, after which she and her mother lived with an uncle in Chelsea, London. They lived next door to Dante Gabriel Rossetti,[3] but she never met him.[4]

In 1889 she married Newlyn School painter Stanhope Forbes. Their son, Alec, was born in 1893.[1][5] In 1904 she and her husband settled at Higher Faugan, a house which they designed and had built for themselves.[6]

In 1909 she pursued cures and restorative periods for cancer in France and London,[4] but died in 1912. In an obituary she was dubbed "the Queen of Newlyn" for her contributions to the art colony. Her husband remarried following her death.[1]

Education

As a young girl,[7] Elizabeth Armstrong, later Forbes, traveled with her mother to England and studied at the South Kensington Art School (now the Royal College of Art).[1][2] She then returned to Canada, during which time her father died.[2][7] From 1877 to 1880 she studied at the Art Students League of New York with William Merritt Chase, who recommended that she next study in Munich. Following his advise, Armstrong went to Germany and studied with J. Frank Currier and Frank Duveneck[7] in the early 1880s.[8]

Career

Early career and further education

In 1882 she explored plein air painting at the artists colony at Pont-Aven in Brittany.[2] She also taught etching there.[4] While in Brittany she sent paintings to London for sale at the Royal Institute and all of the items that she sent were sold on the opening day of the show.[7] The following year she was in London where she worked as a print maker and joined the Society of Painter Etchers.[2] In the summer of 1884 she studied near Haarlem in Zandvoort, the Netherlands with William Merritt Chase.[9]

She worked in oil, watercolour and pastels and made etchings[2] of children, landscapes and fishing scenes.[9] Her works were exhibited in London at the Royal Institute of Painters in Water Colours and the Royal Academy.[2] Some of her etchings, influenced by James Abbott McNeill Whistler and Walter Sickert,[1] were collected by her Pont-Aven mentor, Mortimer Menpes.[4][10]

Cornwall

In the autumn of 1885, Armstrong and her mother moved to Newlyn, Cornwall. She established a studio in Newlyn, sharing the building with a fisherman who stored and repaired nets in the space.[11] She won a medal at the Paris International Exhibition in 1891 and a gold medal for an oil painting at the World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago in 1893.[2] Between 1893 and 1899 she participated in more than 63 exhibitions in London.[4]

After Newlyn, Armstrong lived in St. Ives, where she met Stanhope Forbes, whom she married in 1889.[7] Going against societal roles for married women, Elizabeth Forbes continued to be an active and successful artist after marriage. Further, in 1899 she and her husband Stanhope Forbes opened the Newlyn Art School.[2] They also were instrumental in the creation and ongoing success of the new Passmore Edwards Art Gallery at Newlyn, also known as the Newlyn Art Gallery (NAG).[4] Her works of art, many of them of children, including her son Alec, were influenced by French realism. She was a successful artist, more successful than some of her male counterparts[1] and had a national reputation, most commonly associated with the Newlyn School, or Forbes School.[4]

The Newlyners gained popular approval because their subject matter fell into the traditional and still vital categories of Victorian genre painting. They also depicted the positive and nostalgic image of provincial life and the moral values their urban audience desired. Exterior scenes incorporating recognizable sites and local, nonprofessional models distinguished Newlyn work.

— Sally Mitchell, Victorian Britain[12]

Forbes held an exhibition called Children and Child Lore in London at the Fine Art Society in 1900.[13] The main character based upon her friend Thomas Cooper Gotch, Forbes wrote and illustrated King Arthur's Wood, a children's book for her son that was published in 1904. She founded The Paper Chase, edited by her friend F. Tennyson Jesse in 1908 and wrote poetry.[2][4] In 1910 at the Royal British Colonial Society of Artists Exhibition, Forbes won the merit award.[4]

Following her death her works were shown in 1990 to 1991 in the "Four Centuries of Women’s Art: The National Museum of Women in the Arts" exhibition and a retrospective of her works held at the Penlee House Gallery and Museum in 2000 entitled "Singing from the Walls: The life and work of Elizabeth Forbes."[2]

Works

A partial list of her works includes:[1][14]

  • A Dream Princess, 1897, Royal Cornwall Museum, Truro
  • An Old Dame of Pont Aven, drypoint etching, example at Penlee Museum and the British Museum
  • A Newlyn Maid, oil on canvas, Penlee Museum
  • Boys with a Barrow, drypoint etching, example at Penlee Museum
  • Girl Peeling Onions, drypoint etching, example at Penlee Museum and the British Museum
  • Girl Peeling Onions, oil on canvas, Penlee Museum
  • Portrait of Cicely Jesse, charcoal, Penlee Museum
  • Portrait of the Artist, drypoint etching, example at Penlee Museum
  • School is Out, 1889, oil on canvas, Penlee Museum
  • The Cornish Pasty, drypoint etching, example at Penlee Museum
  • The Critics, 1886 or 1887
  • The Minuet, oil on canvas, Penlee Museum
  • The Pied Piper, mixed media on paper, Penlee Museum
  • Zandvoort Fishergirl, 1884, oil on canvas, Penlee Museum. On loan from Newlyn Art Gallery.

School is Out and Zandvoort Fishergirl were two of her best known paintings.[4]

Her works are exhibited at National Gallery of Canada, National Museum of Women in the Arts in Washington, D.C., Royal Cornwall Museum, Penlee House, Victoria and Albert Museum, West Cornwall Art Archive and in museums in Liverpool, London and Manchester.[4]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Elizabeth Forbes. Penlee House. Retrieved 14 October 2012.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Elizabeth Adela Stanhope Forbes. National Museum of Women in the Arts. Retrieved 5 May 2014.
  3. ^ Caroline Fox; Francis Greenacre; Newlyn Orion Galleries. Artists of the Newlyn School, 1880-1900. Newlyn Orion Galleries; 1979. p. 167.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Elizabeth Adela Forbes. Cornwall Artists. Retrieved 14 October 2012.
  5. ^ Mrs. Lionel Birch. Stanhope A. Forbes, A. R. A., and Elizabeth Stanhope Forbes, A. R. W. S.. Cassell and Company, Limited; 1906. pp. 2-4.
  6. ^ Mrs. Lionel Birch. Stanhope A. Forbes, A. R. A., and Elizabeth Stanhope Forbes, A. R. W. S.. Cassell and Company, Limited; 1906. p. 49–53.
  7. ^ a b c d e Elizabeth Armstrong Forbes. Canadian Woman Artists History Initiative. Retrieved 6 May 2014.
  8. ^ Sandra L. Singer. Adventures Abroad: North American Women at German-speaking Universities, 1868-1915. Greenwood Publishing Group; 2003. ISBN 978-0-313-32371-3. p. 168.
  9. ^ a b Jules Heller; Nancy G. Heller. North American Women Artists of the Twentieth Century: A Biographical Dictionary. Routledge; 19 December 2013. ISBN 978-1-135-63882-5. p. 189.
  10. ^ Mortimer Luddington Menpes. Cornwall Artists. Retrieved 5 May 2014.
  11. ^ Mrs. Lionel Birch. Stanhope A. Forbes, A. R. A., and Elizabeth Stanhope Forbes, A. R. W. S.. Cassell and Company, Limited; 1906. p. 33.
  12. ^ Sally Mitchell. Victorian Britain (Routledge Revivals): An Encyclopedia. Routledge; 6 August 2012. ISBN 978-1-136-71617-1. Newlyn School. p. PT744.
  13. ^ Mrs. Lionel Birch. Stanhope A. Forbes, A. R. A., and Elizabeth Stanhope Forbes, A. R. W. S.. Cassell and Company, Limited; 1906. p. 79.
  14. ^ Mrs. Lionel Birch. Stanhope A. Forbes, A. R. A., and Elizabeth Stanhope Forbes, A. R. W. S.. Cassell and Company, Limited; 1906. pp. 36.

Further reading

  • Carrington, Fitz Roy; Campbell Dodgson. The Print Collector's Quarterly. Catalogue of Dry Points by Elizabeth Adela Forbes ed. 1922. p. 90–100.
  • Cook, Judith, Melissa Hardie. Singing from the walls: the life and art of Elizabeth Forbes (Bristol: Sansom, 2000) reprints Sabin and adds 5 more prints along with 59 book illustrations.
  • Fox, Caroline. Stanhope Forbes and the Newlyn School, David & Charles, 1993
  • Sabin, Arthur K. The Dry-Points of Elizabeth Adela Forbes, formerly E. A. Armstrong (1859–1912) The Print Collector’s Quarterly 1922 Feb Vol 9, No. 1, p75 with a Catalogue of 41 Dry-Points.