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Dienstag, 27. Oktober 2009

seitens der Städte, London, Gotch

LONDON 2009
foto:G.Ludovice

Sketch for Betroth
The child entrhoned 1894


Thomas Cooper Gotch
(1854–1931) was an English Pre-Raphaelite painter and book illustrator, and brother of John Alfred Gotch the noted architect.

Thomas Gotch was born in 1854 in 13 Lower St, Kettering. He came from a middle-class business family who were also distinguished scholars and artists. His Father, Thomas Henry Gotch (born 1805) was a shoe manufacturer and his mother was Mary Ann Gotch (born 1817 in London Ivy Lane) who married Thomas Gotch in St Saviour Southwark in 1847.

He was sent to a local art school, went to Antwerp (Ecole des Beaux Arts) and Paris (J.P. Laurens), then studied at The Slade in London (1878-1880). In 1881 at age 26, after a long engagement, he married fellow art student Caroline Burland Yates (1854-1945).
After varied and energetic world travel, he became more and more involved with the fractious politics around the resistance to the domination of the
Royal Academy of Art, and was a founder member of the New English Art Club.

Death the bride 1894/5
Gotch and his wife settled at the Newlyn artists' colony in Cornwall, from around 1887, although they had previously visited as early as 1880. There he founded the Newlyn Industrial Classes, where the local youth could learn the arts & crafts. He also helped to set up the Newlyn Art Gallery, and served on its committee all his life. He founded (1887) and later served as President (1913-1928) of the Royal British Colonial Society of Artists. Among his friends in Newlyn were fellow artists Stanhope Forbes and Albert Chevallier Tayler.

My Crown and Sceptre 1892

















His beloved only daughter, Phyllis Marian Gotch (born France 1882), made the young Gotch family a mainstay of the Newlyn social-scene. She and her circle of friends (used by Gotch as models) inspired the stories of H.D. Lowry. Phyllis later became a writer and singer, and married around 1913.
He had an elder brother,
John Alfred Gotch, a successful architect, architecture scholar and antiquarian writer.
Thomas Cooper Gotch died in 1931 in
London, and appears to have been buried at Newlyn.

In Newlyn he worked first at painting local scenes in the then-fashionable realist manner. But even these often had a romantic edge, such as The Wizard or an obvious love of surface colour.
In 1891 a visit to
Florence, Italy, opened his eyes to the work of the romantic European symbolists. He took the brave step of changing his style, to make romantic decorative paintings, when the prevailing fashion was against him. His first work in this new style was My Crown and Sceptre (1892), which was the progenitor to his most well-known work The Child Enthroned (1894). The latter, on original exhibition, was hailed by The Times newspaper as the star of that year's Royal Academy show. Until that time, his new style of work had drawn much critical scorn.
He painted religious Christian scenes,
history painting, portraits, and a few landscapes. His best-known paintings, which form the bulk of his work, usually portray girl-children in ornate classical or medievalist dress. The appearance of the girls in his paintings is often noted as being very modern. Gotch was a close and lifelong friend of Henry Scott Tuke, whose work featured a parallel focus on the boy-child. Gotch's lifelong adoration of the beautiful girl-child was shared by other Victorian giants such as John Ruskin and Lewis Carroll.
His emotionally-charged work was immensely popular and critically acclaimed for most of his life, although interest in
neo-romanticism waned after the First World War and he turned to watercolours of flowers. He also illustrated books, such as Round About Wiltshire, The Land of Pardons (an early study of Breton folklore & Celtic Christianity), and contributed illustrations to school readers such as Highroads of Literature.
A retrospective show was held in
Newcastle in 1910, and a memorial exhibition in Kettering in 1931.

Much of his work has survived, and much is still in England; but has never been collected in a print edition. Manuscripts relating his life and work are in the care of the
Victoria and Albert Museum, London. The Alfred East Gallery in Kettering has a substantial collection of his work, but only a small part of it is on permanent display. The gallery sells a small 32-page booklet on Gotch.
There was a show in 2001, T.C. Gotch: The Last of the Pre-Raphaelites at the
Royal Cornwall Museum in Truro.

Incomplete list of paintings
Death the Bride (1894/5)
The Wizard (notable early work)
The Orchard (1887) (notable early work)
My Crown and Sceptre (1892)
The Child Enthroned (1894)
Death the Bride (1894/5)
Portrait of Phyllis Gotch in Blue (198?)
The Pageant of Children (1895)
Alleluia (1896)
Dawn of Womanhood (1900)
The Message (1903)
The Return From The Pageant (1907)
High Velt, South Africa (1910)
The Mother Enthroned (1912-1919)
Self Portrait (1912)
The Flag (191?)
The Nymph (1920)
The Vow (1920s?)
Crossing the Bar (1923)
It is an Ancient Mariner (1925)
The Madonna of the Mount (1926)
John Alfred Gotch (1926)
The Nymph and The Exile (1929-30)
The Birthday (1930)
The Clarinet Player
Young Girl Reading a Manuscript
Dalaphne
A Jest
A Golden Dream (1913)
The Awakening
Mental Arithmetic
The Story of the Money Pig
Fireside Story
Heir to All the Ages
The Dancing Lesson
The Exile
Study of a Young Woman
Portrait of a girl with eyes closed (charcoal)
im:wikipedia/posters

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