Frank Cadogan CowperRARWSRPRWA (16 October 1877 – 17 November 1958)[1] was an English painter and illustrator of portraits, historical and literary scenes, also described as "The Last Pre-Raphaelite".[2][3][4]
Cadogan Cowper was educated at Cranleigh before going on to study art, first at St John's Wood Art School in 1896 and then at the Royal Academy Schools from 1897 to 1902.[5] He first exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1899 and achieved critical acclaim two years later with his An Aristocrat Answering the Summons to Execution, Paris 1791 (1901). In 1902, Cadogan Cowper spent six months as an apprentice helping Edwin Austin Abbey RA complete a monumental canvas painting The Coronation of King Edward VII (now in the Royal Collection) before travelling to Italy to continue his studies.[6][7]
As art trends changed, Cadogan Cowper increasingly exhibited his portrait paintings and still continued to produce historical and literary works of art.[12][13]
Cadogan Cowper retired from London and moved to Gloucestershire. One of his paintings, The Ugly Duckling, was voted "their favourite painting" by visitors to the Cheltenham Art Gallery & Museum in 2005.[14]
The record price for a Cadogan Cowper painting at sale is £469,250 for Our Lady of the Fruits of the Earth (1917) at Christie's in London on 17 December, 2011.[15]
The National Gallery of London is staging an exhibition Saint Francis of Assisi which includes the work of Frank Cadogan Cowper until 30 July, 2023.[16][17]
In February 2024, the Musei di San Domenico in Forlì, Italy, will host the exhibition Pre-Raphaelites: A Modern Renaissance that will feature the work of Cadogan Cowper Vanity.[18]
La Belle Dame sans Merci (1905 ) Exhibited at the Royal Society of Painters in Water Colours the same year; The International Fine Arts Exhibition, Rome, Italy in 1911.
Molly, Duchess of Nona (1905)
A Merciless Beauty (1906)
Mariana in the South (1906) Exhibited at the Royal Society of Painters in Water Colours the same year.
^Waterman, Amanda B. (2008). Thesis. "Frank Cadogan Cowper: The Last Pre-Raphaelite". University of Washington Press.
^Braddock, Alan C. et al. (October 26, 2021). "Picture Ecology: Art and Ecocriticism in Planetary Perspective". Princeton University Art Museum. p. 71, 78. "Frank Cadogan Cowper (1877–1958) was called “the last of the Pre- Raphaelites” for his adherence to the group's principles decades after its dissolution; Cowper, who specialised in historical, literary, and religious subjects, was a fashionable artist at the beginning of the twentieth century—Evelyn Waugh was his major patron, and his paintings were favorably received at Royal Academy exhibitions in London, including by the influential art dealer Joseph Duveen." ISBN9780691236018
^Staff writer (1905). "Molly, Duchess of Nona painted by F. Cadogan Cowper". Biography. The Art Journal, London. pp.348–349. "Mr. F. Cadogan Cowper, whose ‘Molly’ was one of the admired drawings at the extraordinarily successful summer exhibition of the Old Water-Colour Society, has rapidly come to the fore. Still well under thirty, he got his earliest art training in the St. John’s Wood Schools, passing in 1897 to those of the Royal Academy, where for five years he studied. By invitation he was for six months in the studio of Mr. Abbey, and afterwards sojourned for a time in Italy. He has been an exhibitor at Burlington House since 1899, and in 1901 his picture of a Paris aristocrat answering to the summons of execution in 1793 was hung on the line, his ‘Hamlet’ (the churchyard scene) of the following year being bought by the Queensland Government for the Brisbane National Gallery. In the spring of 1904 he was elected an associate of the Old Water-Colour Society, and this year the Chantrey Bequest purchased his ‘St. Agnes in Prison.’ This ‘St. Agnes’ is among the works which cause him to be ranked as a prominent neo-Preraphaelite."
^Cox, Devon (2022). "The Street of Wonderful Possibilities—Whistler, Wilde and Sargent in Tite Street". Aurum Press Ltd., London, England. p. 264. "Cowper had succeeded in attracting Abbey's attention and was invited to Tite Street to assist with the completion of the coronation picture." ISBN9780711274532
^By Natural-Colour Photography: Royal Academy Pictures (May 25, 1912). "Decorations in the Houses of Parliament — F. Cadogan Cowper, A.R.A." Supplement To The Illustrated London News.
^Marmor, Lail A. (May 2013). "Re-Presenting Rossetti: The Art of Frank Cadogan Cowper". University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee Press.
^"Ronald Summerfield Collection at Cheltenham Art Gallery and Museum". 11 September 2013. Retrieved 6 July 2023. A highlight of his collection and one which had great meaning for Ron Summerfield personally is the portrait by Frank Cadogan Cowper (1877-1958), the Ugly Duckling.
^Staff writer (9 December 2011). "World News: Auctioned art set to fetch £4.5m". Irish Independent. Retrieved 6 July 2023. Among other highlights were the original painting of the famous Christmas card design Our Lady of the Fruits of the Earth, by Frank Cadogan Cowper.
^Dickie, Amanda C. (24 May 2023). "St Francis of Assisi at the National Gallery". ICN, London, UK. Retrieved 6 July 2023. and Pre-Raphaelite Frank Cadogan Cowper's luminous 'St Francis of Assisi and the Heavenly Melody', 1904, are yet more highlights.
^"Pre-Raphaelites: A Modern Renaissance". University of York, Dept. of History of Art. 17 April 2023. Retrieved 10 July 2023. Opening in February 2024 at the Musei di San Domenico in Forlì, near Bologna, is the exhibition Pre-Raphaelites: A Modern Renaissance. It will trace the profound impact of historical Italian art on the Pre-Raphaelite movement between the 1840s and 1920s by placing British works alongside their Italian prototypes.
^Cox, Devon (2022). "The Street of Wonderful Possibilities—Whistler, Wilde and Sargent in Tite Street". Aurum Press Ltd., London, England. pp.206–209, 248. "Fortunately for Cowper there were still patrons like the writer Evelyn Waugh and the Wills Family of Miserden Park, who ensured that his subject pictures found their way to appreciative homes." ISBN9780711274532
Further reading
Bedoyere, Camilla de la (January 2006). "A Brief History of Art (The World's Greatest Art)". Flame Tree Publishing, London. pp. 254–256. ISBN978-1844514458
Buckle, Scott Thomas, & Wilson, Neil (Summer 2004). "Frank Cadogan Cowper & Arthur Gaskin". Campbell Wilson, Hove.
Buckle, Scott Thomas (Autumn 2023). "Three Early Drawings by Frank Cadogan Cowper". PRS Review. Volume XXXI, Number 3, pp. 5-10.
Waterman, Amanda B. (2008). Thesis. "Frank Cadogan Cowper: The Last Pre-Raphaelite". University of Washington Press.
Thiele, Madeleine Emerald (2012). "Dialogue and Descent: Frank Cadogan Cowper & John Everett Millais". University of Bristol Press.
Marmor, Lail A. (May 2013). "Re-Presenting Rossetti: The Art of Frank Cadogan Cowper". Theses and Dissertations. 136. University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee Press. [1]
Thiele, Madeleine Emerald (2016). "Frank Cadogan Cowper: Guarding the Pre-Raphaelite Lamp". Swindon Museum Journal. Issue 64.
Benezit, E. (31 October 2011). "Cowper, F. Cadogan". Benezit Dictionary of Artists. Oxford, England: Oxford University Press.
Serota, Nicholas; Upstone, Robert (July 1, 1996). "Treasures of British Art: Tate Gallery". Abbeville Press, New York. p. 221. ISBN978-0789205414
P.G. Konody (January 1908). "The Academy's New Associate: The Work of Mr F. Cadogan Cowper, A.R.A." The Pall Mall Magazine. George Routledge & Sons Ltd. Vol. XLI. No. 177, pp. 20–32.