Rose Mead
Rose Mead | |
---|---|
Barbara Stone - Rose Mead (c. 1940) | |
Born |
Suffolk, England | December 4, 1867
Died |
spring 1946 Suffolk, England |
Nationality | British |
Education | Lincoln School of Art, Westminster School of Art |
Known for | portraiture |
Movement | traditional |
Rose Mead (4 December 1867 – late March 1946) was a British born (Bury St Edmunds) portrait painter who exhibited at the Royal Academy summer exhibition and was a colleague of Augustus John. Rose Mead was a prolific artists who worked in various fields – landscapes, street scenes, still lifes and flower studies alongside her portrait work, using both oil on canvas and watercolour on paper.[1]
Early life
Emma Rose Mead as Rose Mead was christened was born 4 December 1867 in Bury St Edmunds daughter of a plumber, glazier and painter. She was aged 20 before she had any formal artistic training when she attended the Lincoln School of Art. She left there to study at the Westminster School of Art, London in 1892, under the tutorship of Frederick Brown just prior to his appointment as Professor at the Slade School of Fine Art. During this time she painted a self-portrait in the act of cooking. A company that made similar cookers offered £500.00 (£38,961.00 in 2007) to add their name, an amount she refused because she was unwilling to "prostitute" her art.[2] Mead's stay at Westminster was brief before having to return home to nurse her father. After his death Rose Mead studied under Auguste-Joseph Délécluse in Paris, where a pastel portrait was exhibited at the Paris Salon. This same portrait was exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1896.
Later life
Rose Mead returned to Bury St Edmunds in 1897 never, except for the rare holiday, to leave again. In the same year Cuisine en Boheme was shown at the Royal Academy summer exhibition. Two painting Friday Morning at St Mary's and My Mother were shown in the 1899 exhibition.[1] Rose Mead nursed her mother until her death in 1919, whilst earning a living portrait painting, mainly commissioned by local dignitaries.[1][3] In 1929 she visited Newlyn in Cornwall visiting the existing Newlyn School of artists of that time. One figure study titled Painted in Dod Procter's studio in Newlyn a known result of the visit. In c. 1933 she visited the South of France, a watercolour of St Paul de Vence a record of that time. The artist was known by locals to approach girls and young women if she was attracted by some characteristic, and would ask if, with their parents permission, they would be happy to pose for her.[1] Whilst painting she counselled them not to get married, urging them to find fulfilment in a career, one sitter remembering that once the artist had discovered she had married – "She felt that I had quite changed and that it had a detrimental effect on my personality".[1] The artist never achieved the promise shown at the start of her career, it is thought mainly because of the breaks caused by the death of her father and the need to care for her mother until she was aged 52.[1] She was found dead at the bottom of her studio stairs in Crown Street, Bury St Edmunds at the end of March 1946 at the age of 78.