Online Encyclopedia

BART SIR EDWARD JOHN POYNTER

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V22, Page 239 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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BART
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SIR
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EDWARD JOHN POYNTER
  . (1836- ),
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English painter, son of Ambrose Poynter, architect, was horn in Paris on the loth of March 1836 . He pursued his
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art studies in England and in Paris (under Gleyre, 1856-1859), and exhibited his first picture at the Royal Academy in 1861 . In 1869, after the
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exhibition of " Israel in
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Egypt " and " The Catapult," he was elected an Associate of the Royal Academy, and in 1876, the
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year of "
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Atalanta's
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Race," full Academician . In the decorative arts he practised freely as a designer in fresco, mosaic, stained glass, pottery, tile-
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work and the like . While still quite a young man, he was encouraged by the architect William Burges, A.R.A., to design panels for his quaint
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Gothic cabinets; Messrs Powell obtained from him cartoons of designs for stained glass; for the decoration of
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Waltham Abbey church he was employed on a series of
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thirty important designs . Attracted by these, Dalziel Brothers commissioned a number of full-page drawings on wood for the
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illustration of their celebrated " Bible Gallery." The cartoons for " St George " and " St David," the mosaic panels now embellishing the
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outer
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lobby of the Palace of Westminster, were produced in 187o, and they were followed by the "
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Apelles " and Phidias," in the same method of
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reproduction, in the Victoria and Albert Museum; by the important series of frescoes in St Stephen's, Dulwich—scenes from the
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life of the saint; by the decoration of the grill
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room at the Museum at South
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Kensington, with the tiles en camaieu—an achievement strikingly successful and pregnant with results . Always a lover of
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water-colour
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drawing and of the art of landscape
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painting, he was elected to the Royal Society of Painters in Water Colours in 1883 . In 1874 he designed the Ashantee medal; and in 1892, for the coinage of that year, the
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reverse of the
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shilling and florin, to the obverse of Mr Thomas Brock, R.A . When the art teaching centre of South Kensington was assuming the importance it has since attained, Mr Poynter was appointed director for art in the Science and Art Department, and
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principal of the
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National Art Training
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Schools (now the Royal College of Art), and by virtue of his vigorous and successful administration he invested his office with a distinction which, after his resignation in 1881, it soon notoriously lacked . The directorship of the National Gallery became vacant in 1894, and Poynter, profoundly versed in the
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works of the Old Masters, especially of the
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Italian schools, was appointed to the
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post, which he held for ten years . Under his
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rule the National Gallery of
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British Art, at Millbank, presented by the
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late
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Sir Henry Tate, became a department of the National Gallery, and thither were removed many pictures formerly in the British rooms at Trafalgar Square, as well as the Chantrey Collection from South Kensington, &c .

One of the most important services by the director was the editing of the

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great Illustrated Catalogue of the National Gallery (1889-1900), in which every picture in the collection is reproduced—an unprecedented achievement in the annals of art-
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publishing . On the
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death of Sir John Millais in 1896, Poynter was elected to the
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presidency of the Royal Academy, and was knighted . He was made a
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baronet in 1902 . Paintings.—Among Sir
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Edward Poynter's most notable pictures have been the following: " Israel in Egypt " (1867) ; " The Catapult " (1868) ; "
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Perseus and
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Andromeda " (1872) ; " Atalanta's Race " (1876) ; " The Fortune-Teller " (1877) ; "
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Nausicaa and Her Maidens " (1879) ; " Visit to Aesculapius " (188o), now in the Chan-trey Collection in the Tate Gallery; " The Ides of March " (1883) ; Diadumene" (1885), now destroyed; " On the Terrace " (1889) ; " The Meeting of Solomon and the Queen of Sheba " (1891) ; " Horae Serenae " and " Idle Fears " (1894), and numerous portraits and water-colour drawings . Lectures.—In his series of Slade Lectures, delivered from 1875 to 1879, and first published in 1879 (republished, with additions, in 1897), Sir Edward Poynter deals with the whole subject of art
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education, considering in turn Decorative Art, Old and New Art, Systems of Art Education, Hints on the Formation of a Style, Training of Art Students, The Study of Nature, The Value of Things,
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Objects of Study, Professor Ruskin on Michelangelo (hotly controversial in tone), Influence of Art in Social Life, and Ancient Decorative Art . See also Cosmo Monkhouse, " Sir E . J . Poynter, P.R.A.: His Life and Work," Art
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Annual (1897) ; M . H . Spielmann, " Sir E . J . Poynter, P.R.A., and his Studies," The
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Magazine of Art (1897) .

End of Article: BART SIR EDWARD JOHN POYNTER
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