Laurence Hotham Howie (22 August 1876 – 18 October 1963) was a South Australian sculptor painter and art teacher.
History
Laurence was born in Norwood, South Australia the eldest of five children of George Cullen Howie and his wife Clara Jane Howie (née Hotham), who had emigrated from Scotland. Her younger sister was Clara Winifred Howie who became a leading nurse.[1] His father died in 1883 and his mother took the children to stay with her father, the Rev. John Hotham, in Port Elliot, where she ran a small private school.[2]
The School of Design was taken over by the Education Department from the Board of the Public Library, Museum, and Art Gallery in 1909, and its director of over 30 years, H. P. Gill, became principal of the Adelaide School of Art,[3] and Howie was appointed his assistant. He joined the Army engineers in 1915 and served in Egypt with the 13th Field Corps of Engineers in North Africa and the Western Front. He was appointed official war artist after the cessation of hostilities, and in France made a series of sketches which were later used in designing the dioramas in the Australian War Memorial, Canberra.
Gill retired in July 1915 and died at sea in May 1916. J. Christie Wright succeeded him as Principal, reorganising and renaming the school as the South Australian School of Arts and Crafts.[4] Wright was killed in 1917 and Howie was appointed director of the school, retiring in 1944, to be replaced by John C. Goodchild.
He married Janet Johnstone Isabella Davidson (ca.1877 – 16 March 1948) on 17 July 1919; they had a home at 48 Foster street, Parkside. They had two daughters:
Mary Hotham Howie (3 April 1922 – 2015)
Janet Winifred Howie (16 September 1920 - 2006) married Keith Walkem Flint (1920–2011) of Toorak Gardens
References
^Gaston, Carol F., "Clara Winifred Howie (1881–1960)", Australian Dictionary of Biography, Canberra: National Centre of Biography, Australian National University, retrieved 31 October 2023
^David Dolan, 'Howie, Laurence Hotham (1876–1963)', Australian Dictionary of Biography, National Centre of Biography, Australian National University, published first in hardcopy 1983, accessed online 7 February 2015