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This is a directory of British
and foreign firms of artists' suppliers and colourmen operating
in Britain and British firms operating overseas. It focuses on
manufacturing and wholesale suppliers and on those retailers
mentioned by practising artists or who can readily be identified
through advertising in nationally available newspapers and magazines
or through the survival of marked products such as canvases.
For the earlier period before about 1810, artists, booksellers
and stationers dealing in artists' materials are listed on a
selective basis.
Please send additions and corrections
to Jacob Simon at jsimon@npg.org.uk.
Format of individual entries
* entry revised for
2nd edition (2008)
** new entry in 2nd edition (2008)
Names, addresses, life dates or business dates, nature of business
(note 1)
Business history and personal information, product details,
marked and documented products used by individual artists and
patrons (notes 2 and 3)
Portraits
Sources, including references to company and other records; for
abbreviations see Resources
Notes
1. Addresses are taken
from annual publications such as trade directories or periodicals
except where daily or monthly publications or census records
are available. Note that in London the use of postal districts
of the type, 'London W' was introduced from 1857, and then subdivided,
e.g., 'London WC2', introduced from 1917, and amended again as
postal codes, e.g., 'London WC2H 0HE', were introduced from 1966.
Note also that many directories, such as Post Office London directories,
were prepared towards the end of the year preceding publication
so that a supplier may have begun and ended business a year earlier
than indicated here. Overlaps and gaps in the date sequence for
addresses reflect the availability of evidence.
2. Terminology used for marked
products: The terms 'stencilled', 'stamped' and 'marked'
are used. Many canvases were stencilled, as is clear from the
breaks in letters such as 'O'; some early and late canvases appear
to have been stamped. The term 'marked' embraces stencilled,
stamped and labeled products.
3. Cross references to other
artists' suppliers are indicated by adding '(qv)' after the relevant
name, except in the case of the six most common businesses: Ackermann,
Newman, Reeves, Roberson, Rowney and Winsor & Newton.
Changes in the 2nd edition,
2008
In this 2nd revised and
expanded edition, information has been incorporated from online
sources, including the London Gazette, the Edinburgh
Gazette and from early newspapers, together with details
relating to individual suppliers and on some apprenticeships.
The two Gazettes provide an insight into partnership arrangements
and individual bankruptcies.
From the 18th century, information
has been added on three printsellers, Edward Cooper at the beginning
of the century, Dorothy Mercier in the 1760s and Gerard Vandergucht
junr, the short lived son of the more famous engraver. Details
have been provided on the development of James Regnier's business,
in which he was followed by his niece, Celeste Regnier, and on
William De La Cour, his addresses in London in the 1740s and
1750s and his range of artists' materials. The changing trading
arrangements of the colourman, Alexander Emerton, and the rival
business set up by his brother, Joseph, have been clarified.
New entries include the little-known colourman, Matthew Bateman,
active in the 1730s, and the painter and colourman, William Marcellus,
in the 1770s. Further details have been provided concerning Nathan
Drake, John Ford, Francis Stacy, William Ward and other mid and
later 18th-century businesses.
It has been possible to clarify
details relating to the production and sale of crayons by Pache
& Davis, John David Galliard, John James Bonhote and then
Charles Pache. On pencil makers, there is new information on
Nathaniel Middleton and the unrelated John Middleton, both active
in the late 18th century, and on 19th-century makers, Elias Wolff
& Son and Henry Morrell, with a new entry on another pencil
maker, Pether & Co, active in the late 1810s. Details have
been added relating to lay figure makers, Simon Hennekin and
his son George, John Wragg in the 18th century and Robert Briggs
& Son in the mid-19th century.
From the late 18th century the
business arrangements for James Newman and his precursor, Lawrence
Smith, Thomas and William Reeves, Reeeves & Inwood and Rowney
have been clarified, as have the trading addresses of George
Blackman and the short lived business of Edward Kebby. The colour
and varnish maker, Joseph Cole, has been added.
From the 19th century, background
information has been found on William Legg, who preceded Thomas
Brown in High Holborn. Additional details have been provided
on the partnership arrangements of Smith, Warner & Co and
of Thomas Miller. The relationship between Jabez Barnard's and
William Barnard's businesses has been clarified, and further
details provided on George Bowden. Clarification is also provided
on the successive changes in partnership from Cowen & Waring
to Waring & Dimes, Dimes & Elam and Frederick Dimes in
the mid-19th century, and on trading arrangements at Lechertier
Barbe in the later 19th century. A new entry is included for
the mid-19th century artists' stationer, Alexander Shapcott.
Additional information has emerged concerning the long-lived
business of John Sherborn, later James Tillyer & Company,
including its precursors in Oxford St.
Outside London, the entries on
the Freeman business in Norwich and on Aitken Dott in Edinburgh
have been relocated, with expanded information, to the accompanying
directory, British
picture framemakers . New information has been provided on
the Liverpool suppliers, William Strachan, J. Hampson and George
James Keet. New information is also provided for several Birmingham
businesses: the board and paper makers, J. & W. Mitchell,
taken from a newly published history, the colourman, Thomas J.
Morris, later Morris & Gore, and the later supplier, Elizabeth
Norton. Additional details on Edinburgh businesses can be found
for Robert Norrie & Son, John Taylor, Hugh Paton and the
Nelson family.
From the 20th century there is
information on two businesses, those of Madderton & Co, and
of Arthur Crossland, the picture restorer associated with the
Collector's Picture Restoring Co. Ltd in the 1930s.
Acknowledgements
The starting point for
the identification of addresses and business dates has been the
pioneering work of Cathy Proudlove over many years, derived from
trade directories and other sources. References to marked canvases
and panels are also due to her with the exception of most examples
from particular collections and salerooms. Those in the National
Portrait Gallery collection have been recorded by Dr Tim Moreton
over many years. Help in compiling this Directory has been received
from Gallery interns including Eleanor Beyer and Chloe Evans.
Information from other sources is acknowledged in individual
entries.
Locations
Ashmolean Museum, Oxford;
Bodleian Library, Oxford; British Library, London; Christies
(London unless specified); Kenwood, London; Fitzwilliam Museum,
Cambridge; Geffrye Museum, London; Huntington Art Collection,
San Marino, California; Lady Lever Art Gallery, Port Sunlight;
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; National Gallery of Canada,
Ontario; National Gallery of Scotland, Edinburgh; National Museum
of American Art, Washington DC; National Portrait Gallery, London;
Royal Society of Arts, London; Sotheby's (London unless specified);
Sudley, Liverpool; Tate, London; Victoria and Albert Museum,
London; Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, Richmond, Virginia; Walker
Art Gallery, Liverpool; Wallace Collection, London; Yale Center
for British, New Haven; Yale University Art Gallery, New Haven.
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