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Thomas Cooper Gotch (1854-1931)
He studied at
Heatherleys in London (1876–7), at the Koninklijke Academie voor Schone
Kunsten in Antwerp (1877–8) and with Alphonse Legros at the Slade (1878–80).
At the Slade, Gotch became close friends with Henry Scott Tuke and Caroline
Yates (fl 1880–96), whom he married in 1881. While studying in Paris in the
early 1880s Gotch began to practise the plein-air approach later
associated with the Newlyn school. Mental Arithmetic (1883; Melbourne,
N.G. Victoria), painted in Newlyn, exemplifies the Newlyn painters' concern with
light conditions and traditional rural themes. Gotch settled in Newlyn in 1887,
but he continued to experiment with subjects, styles and media. Many oils and
watercolours are indebted to the tonal and compositional innovations of his
friend James McNeill Whistler. Portrait painting (e.g. Sir William Drake in
the Morning Room, 1885; priv. col.) remained Gotch's primary source of
income throughout his life. He sought a new focus for his work in Florence
between 1891 and 1892, and in a series of paintings resulting from this visit,
beginning with My Crown and Sceptre (1892; Sydney, A.G. NSW), he returned
to allegorical genre painting. His new combination of symbolic female figures,
decorative Italian textiles and the static order of early Renaissance art
finally brought him recognition. Alleluia (1896; London, Tate) was
purchased by the Chantrey Bequest trustees. Gotch was active in the Royal
Society of British Artists and the Royal Institution. He was a founding member
of the New English Art Club and the Royal British Colonial Society of Artists,
serving as president between 1913–28.

Title:
Male Nude Study
Materials:
Pencil on laid paper
Size:
Price: Contact
Gallery for Price
Provenance:
Derek Sherborn, Fawns Manor, Bedfont, Middlesex
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