Alexander Constantine Ionides
Alexander Constantine Ionides | |
---|---|
A photograph of Alexander Constantine Ionides | |
Born |
Constantinople, Ottoman Empire | August 20, 1810
Died |
November 10, 1890 80) Hastings, Sussex, England | (aged
Spouse(s) | Euterpe (Lucas) Sgouta |
Alexander Constantine Ionides (Greek: Κωνσταντίνος Ιωνίδης or Κωνσταντίνος Ιωάννου Ioannou or Κωνσταντίνος Ιπλιξής Ipliksis; 1 September 1810 – 10 November 1890) was a British art patron and collector, of Greek ancestry.
Life
Alexander Constantine Iplixes was born in Turkey on 1 September 1810, at Istanbul. His parents were Constantine Ioannes "Iplik(t)sis" Ioannou/Ionides (1775–1852) and his wife Mariora Ioannou-Sentoukakis (1784–1857). His father set up a London branch for his trading firm in c.1815. In 1827 Alexander came to London, finishing his education at Brixton.
He married Euterpe Sgouta (1816–1892) in Constantinople, before settling in Cheetham Hill, Manchester. They would have five children.
He then founded his own textile and wheat trading-firm, Ionides and Company (he changed his surname from Ipliktzis to Ionides at this time), operating between London and the Near East and the Balkans.
He soon began to patronise the arts around 1829, both in Britain (where his protégés included Edward Calvert and George Frederic Watts, who became his friends) and in Greece (where he followed his father as a patron of the University of Athens).
In 1834 Ionides and his family moved to London, where they lived at 9 Finsbury Circus from 1834 to 1839). In 1837 he became a naturalised British citizen. Afterwards they moved to Tulse Hill (1838–64) and finally to 1 Holland Park (1864 onwards), during which time began to gather an artistic salon at his home. Acting as Greek consul-general in 1854–66, he held directorships of the Crystal Palace (1855) and of many banks. His son Alexander introduced him in 1860 to artists whom he had met in Paris, such as James Abbott McNeill Whistler, Edward Poynter, Thomas Armstrong, and George Du Maurier; later Dante Gabriel Rossetti and Edward Burne-Jones also joined Ionides's circle. He commissioned the designers Philip Webb and Thomas Jeckyll to redecorate 1 Holland Park. In 1875 he finally moved to a house called "Windycroft" in Hastings, leaving Alexander to complete the Aesthetic redecoration at 1 Holland Park by commissioning William Morris and Walter Crane).
Children
- Constantine Alexander Ionides (1833–1900), patron and collector
- Aglaia Coronio (1834–1906), patron, collector, confidante of Morris and a friend of Rossetti
- Luke Ionides (1837–1924), friend of Whistler, patron and collector, whose fourth son Basil became an architect
- Alexander (Aleco; 1840–1898), who joined with his father in collecting Tanagra figurines and Greek vases
- Chariclea Anthea Euterpe Dannreuther (1844–1923), married the musician Edward Dannreuther
In popular culture
- Ionides and Arthur Lewis are the inspiration for Sir Lewis Cornelys in the Du Maurier novel, Trilby.
External links
- "Ionides, Alexander Constantine". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/62820. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
|