Francis
Henry Newbery 1855–1946
By George Rawson
Fra Newbery,
as he liked to be called, was a leading figure in British art and
design in the twenty years around 1900. As Director of Glasgow School
of Art from 1885 to 1917 he made his school one of the major art
training institutions in the world. As a painter he was closely
associated with the Glasgow Boys, a group of artists who were part
of the European avant-garde in the early 1890s. He was an important
figure in the Arts and Crafts movement in Scotland and in the later
1890s helped the group of designers around the architect Charles
Rennie Mackintosh to achieve international fame. The Glasgow School
of Art building which Mackintosh designed in close collaboration
with Newbery is everywhere acknowledged as one of the masterpieces
of twentieth century architecture. Newbery, however, spent over
half of his life in Dorset.
He
was born in Membury in Devon on 15 May 1855, but he grew up in Bridport
where he lived from 1858 to 1875. Here he trained to be a teacher
at the Bridport Boys’ General School under its gifted headmaster
John Beard, qualifying in 1874. From about 1871 he attended the
Bridport School of Art, on the first floor of the Literary and Scientific
Institute, qualifying as an art master, and acting as assistant
to its headmaster. In 1875 he obtained an appointment as art master
at a London secondary school. He worked in London schools until
1882 when he obtained a scholarship to become an Art Master in Training
at the National Art Training School (now the Royal College of Art).
By the time he left to become the head of the Glasgow School of
Art in 1885, he was acting as a member of staff, teaching painting,
the figure, and architecture.
At Glasgow Newbery
appointed major professional artists, designers, and architects
to teach his courses. Its teachers included artists, designers,
and architects of international standing from across Europe, and
the number of women on its staff far exceeded those to be found
in other schools. Classes were conducted on practical lines, the
students being thoroughly trained, where possible, in the use of
the materials of their chosen professions. Under Newbery Glasgow
was one of the first art schools to introduce courses in craft subjects.
Believing that everyone was a potential artist, Newbery saw the
teacher’s role as enabling the student to discover and develop
his or her own unique artistic personality.
On his retirement
Newbery and his wife Jessie, a leading embroiderer, designer and
artist in her own right, retired to live in Corfe Castle. After
staying at the Greyhound Inn from 1919 they bought Eastgate House,
on East Street, in 1921 together with a former chapel and cottages
grouped around a courtyard, known as Well Court, on West Street.
The chapel became Newbery’s studio.
Newbery
had had a successful painting career from the 1890s, showing at
leading exhibitions in London, Paris, Munich, the Venice Biennales,
and the United States: his paintings finding their way into public
and private collections across the world. Influenced by Whistler,
the Dutch Hague School and the French painter Millet amongst others,
his work was quite diverse in style. He was primarily a painter
of the human figure: ranging from groups of children, to aesthetic
interiors with single female subjects, to studies of working people
at their occupations, or at leisure. His holidays during the early
twentieth century had been spent at Walberswick on the Suffolk coast
where many of his works were executed.
Much
of Newbery’s work in Dorset focused on the village of Corfe
itself - he made several paintings of the castle, its people, and
his friends across the county, whom he portrayed along with trappings
related to their interests and occupations. Since his last years
in Glasgow, however, he had become increasingly interested in celebrating
the history and culture of particular places in his art, and in
making his work publicly visible in the locations which he depicted.
This related to his philosophy that art was an essential human activity
which should be practiced and shared by everyone. Newbery designed
Corfe’s War Memorial, a sculpture of Saint Edward for its
Parish Church, and a sign for the village. In Bridport he donated
a series of paintings, recording the town’s industrial heritage,
to its Town Hall. In Swanage he designed, decorated and made paintings
for the sanctuary of its Roman Catholic Church: and, to bring art
to the Dorset public at large, he painted signs for its public houses.
He completed most of his public works in Dorset between the ages
of 65 and 75.
Newbery
died, aged 91, at Corfe Castle on 18 December 1946.
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