Henry Holiday

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Henry Holiday
Royal Academy Schools
Known forPainting, stained-glass designer, illustrator, sculptor
StyleRomanticism
MovementPre-Raphaelite Brotherhood
SpouseKate Holiday
RelativesWinifred Raven Holiday (daughter)

Henry Holiday (17 June 1839 – 15 April 1927)

stained-glass designer, illustrator, and sculptor. He was influenced by the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood
, many of whom he knew.

Life

Early years and training

The Last Supper: panel in St Chad's Church, Kirkby

Holiday was born in London. He showed an early aptitude for art and was given lessons by

Royal Academy Schools. Through his friendship with Albert Moore and Simeon Solomon he was introduced to the artists Dante Gabriel Rossetti, Edward Burne-Jones and William Morris of the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood
. This movement was to be pivotal in his future artistic and political life.

Dante and Beatrice (1883)

In the same year, 1855, Holiday made a journey to the Lake District. This was to be the first of many trips to the area, where he would often holiday for long periods of time. Whilst there, he spent much of his time sketching the views which were to be seen from the various hills and mountains. He wrote, "For concentrated loveliness, I know nothing that can quite compare with the lakes and mountains of Westmorland, Cumberland and Lancashire".[full citation needed]

Paintings

Holiday worked in both oils and watercolours. In 1858, his first picture, a landscape painting, was exhibited at the Royal Academy and immediately sold; from that year his work was frequently shown at the Academy and elsewhere. Other pictures include:

Holiday spent much time at the studios of Sir Edward Burne-Jones, where groups of artists would meet to discuss, exchange and pool ideas. The influence of Burne-Jones can be seen in Holiday's work.

Stained glass

Modello or cartoon for three-panel stained glass window in the Royal Ontario Museum

In 1861, Holiday accepted the position of stained glass window designer for

glass works in Hampstead
, producing stained glass, mosaics, enamels and sacerdotal objects.

Holiday's stained glass work can be found all over Britain. Some of his best is at the chapel of Worcester College, Oxford (c.1865); Westminster Abbey (the Isambard Kingdom Brunel memorial window, 1868); St Luke's Church, Kentish Town; St Mary Magdalene, Paddington (1869); and Chartered Accountants' Hall, Moorgate. In 2018, four of his stained-glass windows were reinstalled in Chartered Accountants' Hall after being lost for almost 50 years following their removal for an extension in 1970.[8]

Examples in the United States of Holiday's work may be seen in the sacristy of St. John's Chapel, Groton School (Groton, Massachusetts—panels by Holiday repurposed from the School's original chapel), and in Grace Church in New York City.

Other work and personal life

Study of drapery
Hunting of the Snark, plate 1
Oak Tree House in Hampstead, designed for Holiday by Basil Champneys

Holiday also created some sculpture, in 1861 producing a piece called Sleep which attracted favourable critical interest.

Holiday worked for architect William Burges for a period, including providing wall and ceiling paintings for Worcester College, Oxford (1863–64)[9] and furniture paintings – including Sleeping Beauty for the headboard in the bedroom – at Burges's London home, The Tower House.[10] The Sleeping Beauty bed is now in the collection of the Higgins Art Gallery & Museum, Bedford. Holiday has four oil paintings in British national public collections.[11]

In October 1864, Holiday married Catherine Raven (1866-1949) and they moved to

embroiderer who worked for Morris & Co. They had one daughter, Winifred (1866–1949).[12]

In 1867, Holiday visited Italy for the first time and was inspired by the originality of the Renaissance artists he saw on display there.

Ceylon
as part of the "Eclipse Expedition". His astronomical drawings were subsequently published in the national press and attracted great interest.

On his return to England in 1872, he commissioned architect Basil Champneys to design a new family home in Branch Hill, Hampstead, which was named "Oak Tree House". In 1888, William Gladstone was a visitor.[14]

In July 1875, Holiday was commissioned by

The Expression of Emotions in Man and Animals.[15]

From 1899, Holiday worked with Jessie Mothersole as studio assistant and she remained closely associated with the family until Holiday's death. In 1906 Holiday gave Mothersole a drawing of his daughter Winifred, which later was acquired by the British Museum.[16]

In 1907, Holiday went to Egypt, painting a series of watercolours and illustrations on ancient Egyptian themes. These were exhibited at Walker's Gallery, London, in March 1908 jointly with Mothersole who had been working on Egyptian archaeological drawings and watercolours since 1903/4.[17] In 1907–08, he commissioned the building of a holiday home, Betty Fold,[18] in his favourite part of the Lake District.

Between 1912 and 1919 he painted the apse of the east end of St Benedict's Church at Small Heath, Birmingham, depicting Christ in Glory with angels, and saints in arcading, below, in Byzantine style.[19]

Holiday had been a

socialist throughout his life and, together with his wife Kate and daughter Winifred, supported the Suffragette movement. The family were close acquaintances of Myra Sadd Brown and Emmeline Pankhurst
and her daughter, and had organised local suffragette meetings in the Lake District.

Holiday died on 15 April 1927 in London, two years after his wife, Kate. His nephew, Gilbert Holiday (1879–1937), son of Sir Frederick Holiday, was also an artist[20] who also has paintings in British collections.[21]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ *Henry Holiday: An artist's album (Courtauld institute).
  2. ^ "The Burgesses of Calais by Henry Holiday :: artmagick.com". Archived from the original on 14 June 2011.
  3. ^ Holiday, Henry (1914). Reminiscences of My Life. p. 96.
  4. ^ "Henry Holiday (Biographical details)". British Museum. Retrieved 13 October 2017. Holiday's 'The Bride and the Daughters of Jerusalem' (1861–3) has also disappeared, but the study (1982,0515.22) clearly reflects the influence of Rossetti and Burne Jones.
  5. ^ "Artwork highlights".
  6. ^ Various. Famous Paintings, Volume 1 (Cassell, 1891), no. 1.
  7. ^ "Temple of Philae".
  8. ^ Parker, Nick. "From the top: Nick Parker – see last paragraph, 'Stained glass windows come home'". Archive-It. ICAEW. Archived from the original on 31 December 2019. Retrieved 23 November 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  9. ^ Geoffrey Tyack. Oxford: an architectural guide p226.
  10. ^ William Burges Archived 27 November 2010 at the Wayback Machine
  11. ^ 4 artworks by or after Henry Holiday at the Art UK site
  12. ^ a b Short biography Archived 14 February 2020 at the Wayback Machine (Lewis Carroll Society).
  13. ^ Simeon Solomon in Italy Archived 12 June 2010 at the Wayback Machine for more details.
  14. ^ Historic England. "Oak Tree House (1245496)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 27 March 2022.
  15. ISSN 0193-886X. The article is available online
    .
  16. ^ "drawing". British Museum. Retrieved 1 May 2019.
  17. ^ "Exhibition Culture: title text".
  18. ^ Betty Fold, retrieved 22 September 2014
  19. ^ Historic England. "Details from listed building database (1076300)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 2 December 2016.
  20. ^ Gilbert Joseph Holiday
  21. ^ 5 artworks by or after Gilbert Joseph Holiday at the Art UK site

Bibliography

  • Holiday, Henry. Stained glass as an art (1896).
  • Holiday, Henry. Art and Individualism (1903)
  • Holiday, Henry. Reminiscences of My Life (Heinemann London, 1914).
  • Carroll, Lewis. The Hunting of the Snark an Agony, in Eight Fits (London: MacMillan & Co., 1876).
  • Various. Famous Paintings, Volume 1 (Cassell, 1891), no. 1.
  • Mackay, Angus M. Henry Holiday and his art. Article from The Westminster Review, Volume 158 (1902) pp. 391 ff.
  • The decorative work of Mr. Henry Holiday (Studio International, Volume 46, 1909) pp. 106–115.
  • Baldry, A. L. Henry Holiday (Walker's quarterly, nos. 31–32, pub. by London: Walker's Galleries, 1930).
  • Henry Holiday 1839–1927, exhibition catalogue (London: William Morris Gallery, Walthamstow, 1989).
  • Wilcox, Scott & Newall, Christopher. Victorian landscape watercolors (Hudson Hills, 1992) p. 190.
  • Cohen, Morton N. & Wakeling, Edward. Lewis Carroll and his illustrators (Macmillan, London, 2003) pp. 22–27.

External links