Walter Osborne

For the American journalist, hotel owner and government official, see Walter F. Osborne.
Walter Osborne
Born (1859-06-17)17 June 1859
Rathmines, Dublin
Died 24 April 1903(1903-04-24) (aged 43)
Nationality Irish
Known for Oil landscape
Awards Taylor Prize;
Royal Hibernian Academy

Walter Frederick Osborne (17 June 1859 24 April 1903) was an Irish impressionist landscape and portrait painter. Most of his paintings featured women, children, and the elderly as well as rural scenes.

Career

Walter Osborne was born in Rathmines, Dublin, the second of three sons of William Osborne, a successful animal painter. He was educated at Rathmines School and at the Royal Hibernian Academy school.[1]

Feeding the chickens (1885)
An October Morning by W F Osborne, 1885

He won the Taylor Prize in 1881 and 1882, the highest student honour in Ireland of the time, while studying at the Koninklijke Academie voor Schone Kunsten in Antwerp. He was influenced by the Flemish painter, Rubens, and the French realist, plein-air painter, Jules Bastien-Lepage. In 1883, Osborne moved from Antwerp to Brittany where he painted his famous Apple Gathering, Quimperlé, now in the National Gallery of Ireland. Soon after, he moved to England where he worked alongside Nathaniel Hill and Augustus Burke at Walberswick.

In 1886, he was elected to the Royal Hibernian Academy and received many commissions for portraits.[1] This was an important source of income, as he had no private means of his own. After his sister died he was involved in looking after her daughter, and his own parents became increasingly financially dependent on him.

In 1892, he returned to Ireland to live in the family residence, and he also had a studio at No. 7 St. Stephen's Green. He spent a considerable amount of time painting outdoors, in Dublin around St. Patrick's Cathedral or in the country. He was well liked in social circles and counted the surgeon Sir Thornely Stoker, brother of Bram Stoker, among his best friends.

On Suffolk Sands, 1887 - Oil on canvas 10 x 12" - The Hunt Museum, Limerick, Shades of Light, June 2005 - Ref. Sketch in ink dated 1886, National Gallery of Ireland, cat.19,206

He died prematurely at the age of 43 from pneumonia and was buried in Mount Jerome Cemetery.[1]

Some critics suggest that at the time of his death he was on the brink of his artistic maturity. His final work Tea in the Garden, a dazzling fusion of naturalism and impressionism, remained unfinished at his death and is now in the collection of the Hugh Lane Municipal Gallery in Dublin.

In recent years his work has become highly sought after by collectors.[2]

References

Sources

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Bibliography

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