Nelson Dawson thumbnail 1
Not on display

Nelson Dawson

Oil Painting
1892 (painted)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

After being trained in fine art and metalwork at the South Kensington Schools between 1885 and 1887, Dawson (1859-1941) began a career as a landscape artist. He married Edith Robinson, who had studied metalwork at the South Kensington Schools, in 1893. In 1895 Nelson and Edith Dawson began working predominantly in metalwork. Dawson designed and made metalwork items including lights, bath taps, church metalwork and the trowel used by Queen Victoria for laying the foundation stone of the Victoria & Albert Museum in 1899. In 1901 Dawson became the director of the newly founded Artificers' Guild. He became an active painter again in 1914.

The painting is signed J. Cooke in the bottom right corner of the canvas. The artist can probably be identified as John Cooke (exhibiting 1895-1907), who, like the subject, was working in the Trafalgar Studios, Manresa Road, Chelsea, in the 1890s.. In this portrait the artist is shown against a dark background in three quarter profile looking to the left. In the left hand corner is a quasi-heraldic device formed of two paintbrushes and a metalworker's hammer, overlaid with an ivy leaf, and the date 1892. This conveys the sitter's profession to the audience.

Object details

Categories
Object type
TitleNelson Dawson (generic title)
Materials and techniques
Oil on canvas
Brief description
Oil on canvas mounted in a repoussé copper Arts and Crafts frame on wood core, with a wood fillet, 'Nelson Dawson', painted by J. Cooke, 1892.
Physical description
A portrait in oil on canvas of the artist and designer Nelson Dawson, head and shoulders, facing left, mounted in a repoussé copper frame decorated with trails of ivy leaves and stems. At the top left of the canvas is painted a quasi-heraldic device formed of two paintbrushes and a metalworker's hammer, overlaid with an ivy leaf, and the date 1892.
Dimensions
  • Estimate height: 51.4cm
  • Estimate width: 41.2cm
  • Framed height: 63cm
  • Framed width: 53cm
Style
Marks and inscriptions
J. Cooke 92 (Signature; date; Front; bottom right; red oil paint)
Credit line
Given by Rhoda Bickerdike
Object history
It is not known exactly how this object came into the museum. It is most likely that it was acquired in the 1980's by Shirley Bury, the then Keeper of Metalwork. Shirley Bury was a friend of Rhoda Bickerdike (née Dawson) and according to a note on RP1992/1083, she and her colleagues in Metalwork received a body of Dawson material that was later transferred to the Archive of Art and Design (AAD/1988/8). It is likely that this painting was handed to PDP at that time along with E.1404-2001 and E.1405-2001 (watercolours by Rhoda Bickerdike).

See RF 2000/1056 for further details
Subject depicted
Summary
After being trained in fine art and metalwork at the South Kensington Schools between 1885 and 1887, Dawson (1859-1941) began a career as a landscape artist. He married Edith Robinson, who had studied metalwork at the South Kensington Schools, in 1893. In 1895 Nelson and Edith Dawson began working predominantly in metalwork. Dawson designed and made metalwork items including lights, bath taps, church metalwork and the trowel used by Queen Victoria for laying the foundation stone of the Victoria & Albert Museum in 1899. In 1901 Dawson became the director of the newly founded Artificers' Guild. He became an active painter again in 1914.

The painting is signed J. Cooke in the bottom right corner of the canvas. The artist can probably be identified as John Cooke (exhibiting 1895-1907), who, like the subject, was working in the Trafalgar Studios, Manresa Road, Chelsea, in the 1890s.. In this portrait the artist is shown against a dark background in three quarter profile looking to the left. In the left hand corner is a quasi-heraldic device formed of two paintbrushes and a metalworker's hammer, overlaid with an ivy leaf, and the date 1892. This conveys the sitter's profession to the audience.
Collection
Accession number
E.1406-2001

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Record createdDecember 4, 2001
Record URL
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