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Frances Caroline Fairman (1839 – February 1923) was a British watercolourist, a painter in oils, and an illustrator. In her lifetime she was best known for her canine portraits, some of which were commissioned by royalty and aristocracy. She was known as "the Lady Landseer" for the quality of her work. She travelled to the Americas, France, and Switzerland, returning with watercolour landscape sketches.

Frances C. Fairman
Fairman in 1910
Born1839 (1839)
Lynsted, England
DiedFebruary 1923 (aged 8384)
London
Resting placeSt Mary's Catholic Cemetery, Kensal Green
Known forAnimal paintings

Fairman was born in Kent and studied under Louis Henri Deschamps in Paris, but for most of her life lived and worked in London. When she was in her late 50s, she was taken to court and fined for attempting to prevent a hansom cab driver from whipping his horse in Fulham Road, London, and for striking the cabman with her hand after he had hit her.


Life


Frances Caroline "Fanny" Fairman was baptised on 20 March 1839 at Lynsted, Kent.[1][2] She spent most of her working life in London.[3] She started her life at Millers House, Lynsted, where she lived with her parents and five servants.[4] The 1851 census recorded her as a scholar at twelve years old, at 30 Linsted Street, Lynsted, Kent, with her parents and four house servants.[5] By 1861 she was living with her mother at 7 Cambridge Square, Paddington, with one servant. No profession was declared for either woman.[6] The 1871 Census shows her as a guest of Colonel B. Hall, a gunpowder manufacturer, at Syndale House, Ospringe, Kent.[nb 1][7] In 1891 she was living at 4 Culversden Road, Drysdale, Streatham, London, with one servant, describing herself as an artist and watercolourist.[8] The 1911 Census found her living alone at 4 Avenue Studios, Fulham, London, describing herself as an artist of dog portraits, working independently at home.[9]

In 1873, Fairman and her mother spotted a false reference which had been presented by the "tall, well-dressed" James Bartley when applying for the position of butler at their Kensington house. Bartley had invented a former employer, the Hon. Mrs G. Sutton, and had forged a letter purporting to be from her. Bartley pled guilty in court and was fined £15 10s. (equivalent to £1,461.13 in 2021)[10] with the alternative of imprisonment.[11] He paid the fine.[12]

In 1887, Fairman inherited a legacy from her uncle George Gosselin of Bristol.[13]

The hansom cab, a forerunner of the taxicab
The hansom cab, a forerunner of the taxicab

The Daily Telegraph & Courier said that Fairman had "the artistic temperament".[14] On 8 November 1898, an incident with a horse, a hansom cab and a driver named Childs landed her in court. Mr A. Lincoln Reed appeared for the plaintiffs the Co-operative Cab Company who were claiming for damage to the cab and horse.[14]

The horse became restive [on Fulham Road] ... and an application of the whip became necessary. The defendant [Fairman] then ran up from behind and sprang at the horse's head, catching the off-side rein, and crying, "You brute; leave the horse alone." The suddenness of her rush caused the horse to rear and plunge towards the railings, over which the near-side rein was thrown. "In order to save his life," as he said in evidence, Childs left his dickey. Defendant released her hold, and immediately the animal bolted, eventually colliding with a four-wheeled cab, and overturning the hansom. Childs requested the lady to go with him to the scene of the accident, and as she refused took her by the sleeve to prevent her leaving the spot. A police officer who came up declined to arrest the driver for assault, and would not agree with Miss Fairman that he was drunk, nor did he find any marks of the ill-treatment on the horse. Proceedings were taken out against the driver before a police magistrate, but the charge was dismissed, the justice upon that occasion telling Miss Fairman "that her action had caused all the trouble." Mr Reed: Have you ever driven a hansom cab in the streets of London? Defendant: As you ask me – I have. On one occasion I had a drunken driver, and I had to take the reins myself. I have taken the reins on another occasion, the driver then being drunk also. Mr Reed: Did you mount the dickey on these occasions? Defendant: No, I drove from inside. Mr Reed: You were lucky not to have met with an accident; don't you think so? Defendant: Oh, I got through it all right. Mr Reed: When the cabman hit you, what did you do? Defendant: Struck him with the other hand. (Laughter) ... Eventually the jury brought in a verdict for plaintiffs, assessing the damages at £39 (equivalent to £4,670.55 in 2021).[10] (Daily Telegraph & Courier (London), 1899)[14]

Fairman died aged 85 in Chelsea, London.[nb 2][15][16] Her funeral on 7 February 1923 was a requiem mass at Brompton Oratory. Queen Alexandra sent a wreath with the message, "In deepest remembrance of a great animal artist. We shall all miss her greatly." Fairman had painted Edward VII's fox terrier Caesar, who "followed the [king's] funeral procession to the grave".[17][nb 3]


Career


Fairman was trained in Paris by Louis Henri Deschamps (1846–1902).[18][nb 4] Known as "the Lady Landseer" for her animal paintings,[19] she was a watercolourist,[3][8] painter in oils,[20] and illustrator.[21] Her professional signature was FCF or Frances Fairman, but in newspapers she was usually named as Frances C. Fairman. She had membership of the Society of Lady Artists.[20] Her home and work address was 4 The Avenue Studios, 76 Fulham Road, South-West London.[nb 5][9][22] She flourished from around 1864 until 1917.[23][24]

At some point before 1889, Fairman travelled to the Americas. She went to Florida,[25] she visited Brazil before 1897, and she brought back and exhibited works depicting both of those locations.[26] She also made watercolour sketches in Switzerland.[27] In 1917 her picture We owe it to King Edward was exhibited at the Albert Hall, where the Ladies' Kennel Association dog show was being held. As a member, Fairman helped to support the association financially, and the picture was sold in aid of the Association.[24]


Royal commissions


Fairman "painted nearly 30 royal pets in her time", including Edward VII's fox terrier, Caesar,[17] and she had the use of a studio at Buckingham Palace.[28] The magazine Vote said that she had "painted many portraits of the favourite dogs of Queen Victoria, King Edward, and Queen Alexandra, and ... had attained a considerable reputation as an artist of animal life".[16] In 1897, The Duke and Duchess of York, Princess Victoria and the Princess of Wales visited the Clifford Galleries in London in order to view The Dog Show on Paper and Canvas, an exhibition of Fairman's canine portraits.[29][30] In 1910 Fairman was commissioned to paint four dogs, by the Queen.[nb 6][31] In 1911, the Pall Mall Gazette described Fairman thus:[18]

Painters of popular pets are greatly appreciated if their work is of merit. Miss Frances Fairman ... belong[s] to the select few who have large circles of admirers. [Following her studies in Paris] she became quickly known, and was soon overwhelmed with work. She is the only woman painter living who painted Queen Victoria's dogs by command. She is particularly happy in lifelike pictures of Queen Alexandra's pet Japanese spaniels Togo and Haru. These dogs, along with six others since dead, were a special present sent to Queen Alexandra by the Mikado. Miss Fairman painted a pet dog of the late Duke of Clarence, which became King Edward's pet after the duke's death. She also painted two of Princess Victoria's favourite dogs, these pictures being Queen Alexandra's birthday gifts to her daughter. Numerous well-known society people are glad to have their dogs immortalised by Miss Fairman's deft brush. Sir Dighton and the late Lady Probyn were among her staunchest admirers. Princess Wrede insisted on her coming to Paris to paint her famous Japs.[nb 7] Lady Hilda Moseley,[nb 8] Lady Samuelson, H.H. the Ranee of Sarawak (Lady Brooke), Lady Evelyn Ewart, Lord Ducie, Lord Cathcart and Princess Duleep Singh are a few of the most constant patrons of Miss Fairman. Her wonderful facility in reproducing a dog's expression is probably found in her being able to make a constant study of them, for she has a kennel of delightful pugs in her studio. (Pall Mall Gazette, 1911)[18]

In 1903, Fairman produced a photogravure of one of her politically themed pieces,[nb 9] The agreement: England and Japan, 1902. The Globe described it thus: "A bulldog and a Japanese spaniel standing side by side with a Chinese ivory pagoda behind them. The reproduction is very successful in retaining the effect of the original painting, and gives a good suggestion of Miss Fairman's work. A proof of the engraving has been accepted by the Queen".[32] The original painting was sold as part of the late Mario Buatta’s collection in 2020.[33]


Book illustrations



Exhibitions


Fairman's works were exhibited in London from 1865 onwards.[3]


Collections



Reviews


Four generations, 1897
Four generations, 1897

Notes


  1. B. Hall was probably William Hall, a partner in the Marsh or Oare gunpowder works, near Faversham, Kent. See Faversham Gunpowder Trail
  2. Fairman's birth and baptism were registered in early 1839, but no specific date of birth is given in the indexes. Therefore she could have been born in 1838 or early 1839. So at a stretch she could have been 85 at death, although 84 is more likely in view of present information.
  3. Fairman was buried in plot 2245 at St Mary's Catholic Cemetery, Kensal Green, London.
  4. For more information on Deschamps, see Louis Deschamps, Sutcliffe Galleries
  5. Unless the house numbers have changed, Fairman's studio address is in postcode SW3 – a white Regency building with a shop on the ground floor. See Street View
  6. Because 1910 saw the end of Edward VII's reign and the beginning of George V's, it is not known which queen commissioned dog portraits in that year.
  7. Princess Wrede was Carmen de Alvarez y Pacheco, the Argentinian wife of Prince Adolf of Wrede. She was a kleptomaniac who stole silver from hotels. See Trove
  8. Lady Hilda Harpur Crewe was the daughter of Vauncey Harpur-Crewe and married Godfrey Moseley.
  9. Fairman's painting The agreement refers to the aftermath of the Boxer Rebellion
  10. See also Category:Commissions for the Royal Family by Frances C. Fairman for the other paintings in the Royal Collection
  11. The painting, Contemplating the fate of China, has a political slant, containing a reference to the Japanese invasion of Taiwan (1895).

References


  1. GRO Births Mar 1839 Fairman Frances Caroline Faversham V 176
  2. "Frances Caroline Fairman". ancestry.co.uk. Retrieved 29 January 2021. Frances Caroline Fairman female. Baptism date 20 March 1839, Linsted, Kent, England. Father Samuel Creed Fairman. Mother Christian Gosselin. FHL film number 1850188. it 11 p 97 no 776
  3. Waters, Grant M. (1975). Dictionary of British Artists working 1900–1950. Eastbourne, England: Eastbourne Fine Art. p. 110. Retrieved 18 January 2021.
  4. "1841 England Census Lynsted Kent HO107/474/3". ancestry.co.uk. H. M. Government. Retrieved 19 January 2021.
  5. "1851 Census Lynsted Kent HO107/1626 p.7". ancestry.co.uk. H. M. Government. Retrieved 19 January 2021.
  6. "1861 England Census Paddington RG9/9 p.18". ancestry.co.uk. H. M. Government. Retrieved 19 January 2021.
  7. "1871 Census Ospringe RG10/978 p.13, schedule 23". ancestry.co.uk. H. M. Government. Retrieved 19 January 2021.
  8. "1891 England Census RG12/455 p.61, schedule 112". ancestry.co.uk. H. M. Government. Retrieved 19 January 2021.
  9. "1911 Census Fulham, schedule 89". ancestry.co.uk. H. M. Government. Retrieved 19 January 2021.
  10. UK Retail Price Index inflation figures are based on data from Clark, Gregory (2017). "The Annual RPI and Average Earnings for Britain, 1209 to Present (New Series)". MeasuringWorth. Retrieved 11 June 2022.
  11. "Hammersmith". London Evening Standard. British Newspaper Archive. 10 April 1873. p. 7 col.2. Retrieved 22 January 2021.
  12. "A false character". Pall Mall Gazette. British Newspaper Archive. 9 April 1873. p. 9 col.1. Retrieved 22 January 2021.
  13. "The will of Mr Gosselin". Western Daily Press. British Newspaper Archive. 9 July 1887. p. 3 col.5. Retrieved 22 January 2021.
  14. "The artistic temperament". Daily Telegraph & Courier (London). British Newspaper Archive. 28 February 1899. p. 6 col.5. Retrieved 22 January 2021.
  15. Deaths Mar 1923 Fairman Frances C. 85 Chelsea 1a 437
  16. "An animal painter". Vote. British Newspaper Archive. 16 February 1923. Retrieved 19 January 2021.
  17. "Great animal artist". Western Mail. British Newspaper Archive. 8 February 1923. p. 4 col.2. Retrieved 19 January 2021.
  18. L.L. (28 October 1911). "Royal sitters". Pall Mall Gazette. British Newspaper Archive. p. 3 col.3. Retrieved 27 January 2021.
  19. "Items". Westminster Gazette. British Newspaper Archive. 9 February 1897. p. 9 col.2. Retrieved 21 January 2021.
  20. "Frances C. Fairman (1836–1923), Roy". rct.uk. Royal Collection Turst. Retrieved 18 January 2021.
  21. "Dogs". Morning Post. British Newspaper Archive. 13 January 1906. p. 5 col.5. Retrieved 22 January 2021.
  22. Exhibition Catalogue. London: Royal Academy. 1897. pp. 17, 68. Retrieved 19 January 2021.
  23. "A longhorn by F.C. Fairman". nationaltrustcollections.org.uk. National Trust. Retrieved 26 January 2021.
  24. "Ladies' Kennel Association notes". The Tatler. British Newspaper Archive. 28 February 1917. p. 34. Retrieved 27 January 2021.
  25. "Dudley Gallery Art Society". The Queen. British Newspaper Archive. 9 February 1889. p. 32 col.1. Retrieved 21 January 2021.
  26. "Drama, music, art etc., paintings of dogs". Reynolds's Newspaper. British Newspaper Archive. 14 February 1897. p. 6 col.2. Retrieved 21 January 2021.
  27. "Lot 128 10th August 2016". tooveys.com. Tooveys. 2016. Retrieved 29 January 2021.
  28. "The Queen's Japanese spaniel sits for his portrait". Daily Mirror. British Newspaper Archive. 26 February 1910. p. 8,9. Retrieved 12 February 2021. The Queen's Japanese [spaniel sits f]or his portrait. Miss Frances C. Fairman the well[-known artist has be]en honoured with a command from the Queen to paint four of Her Maje[sty's dogs. Here she is at ]work at Buckingham Palace. Togo, presented to the [Queen by the Emperor of Japa]n, is the sitter. (The photo shows Fairman working in a studio).
  29. "London day by day". Daily Telegraph & Courier (London). British Newspaper Archive. 10 March 1897. p. 7 col.2. Retrieved 22 January 2021.
  30. "Beads from the bracelet of fashion, the Princess of Wales". Cheltenham Looker-On. British Newspaper Archive. 13 March 1897. p. 8 col.2. Retrieved 22 January 2021.
  31. Benezit Dictionary of Artists. Oxford University Press. 31 October 2011. doi:10.1093/benz/9780199773787.article.B00061149. Retrieved 5 February 2021.
  32. "Miss F.C. Fairman". Globe. British Newspaper Archive. 14 January 1903. p. 4 col.4. Retrieved 23 January 2021.
  33. Tonelli, Lucia (27 January 2020). "Mario Buatta's Home Collections Achieve $7.6 Million at Sotheby's Auction". Town & Country. Retrieved 12 February 2021.
  34. "Books of the day". Newcastle Daily Chronicle. British Newspaper Archive. 13 November 1907. p. 8 col.5. Retrieved 26 January 2021.
  35. "Art exhibitions, Dudley Gallery". Illustrated London News. British Newspaper Archive. 27 February 1886. p. 10 col.2. Retrieved 22 January 2021. (Fairman is wrongly titled "Mr" in this article.)
  36. "At the Dudley gallery ...". Truth. British Newspaper Archive. 7 February 1889. p. 21 col.2. Retrieved 21 January 2021.
  37. "Art exhibitions". Illustrated London News. British Newspaper Archive. 29 June 1889. p. 22 col.3. Retrieved 22 January 2021. (Note: The ILN wrongly gives Fairman the title, "Mr", here.)
  38. "Our London correspondence". Glasgow Herald. Gale. 14 April 1890. p. 7 col.4. Retrieved 27 January 2021.
  39. "The Society of Lady Artists". Morning Post. British Newspaper Archive. 4 May 1892. p. 4 col.2. Retrieved 21 January 2021.
  40. "Dudley Gallery Art Society". The Queen. British Newspaper Archive. 19 April 1890. p. 43 col.2. Retrieved 21 January 2021.
  41. "Important art exhibition at Bracknell". Reading Mercury. British Newspaper Archive. 13 October 1894. p. 7 col.2. Retrieved 21 January 2021.
  42. "The Studio: Society of British Artists". The Queen. British Newspaper Archive. 11 April 1896. p. 41 col.2. Retrieved 21 January 2021.
  43. "Sketches of pictures in the Royal Society of British Artists". The Queen. British Newspaper Archive. 25 April 1896. p. 44 col.2. Retrieved 21 January 2021.
  44. "Society of Lady Artists". Morning Post. British Newspaper Archive. 17 February 1896. p. 6 col.6. Retrieved 21 January 2021.
  45. "Art and artists". Gentlewoman. British Newspaper Archive. 8 February 1896. p. 32 col.3. Retrieved 21 January 2021.
  46. "Sketches of pictures at the Society of Lady Artists exhibition, Suffolk Street". The Queen. British Newspaper Archive. 15 February 1896. p. 29 col.2. Retrieved 21 January 2021.
  47. "Society of Lady Artists". Gentlewoman. British Newspaper Archive. 8 February 1896. p. 32 (170) col.3. Retrieved 27 January 2021.
  48. "Art and artists". Gentlewoman. British Newspaper Archive. 23 February 1897. p. 26 col.3. Retrieved 21 January 2021.
  49. "Art and artists". Globe. British Newspaper Archive. 24 February 1897. p. 6 col.1. Retrieved 21 January 2021.
  50. "Society of Lady Artists". The Queen. British Newspaper Archive. 12 February 1898. p. 56 col.1. Retrieved 21 January 2021.
  51. "Graves Galleries". Morning Post. British Newspaper Archive. 7 July 1898. p. 1 col.4. Retrieved 21 January 2021.
  52. Royal Academy Exhibition Catalogue. London: Royal Academy. 1899. p. 25. Retrieved 19 January 2021.
  53. "Five art exhibitions – Society of Women Artists". Western Daily Press. British Newspaper Archive. 30 January 1899. p. 3 col.4. Retrieved 22 January 2021.
  54. "The Society of Women Artists". Morning Post. No. 39517. Gale. 30 January 1899. p. 3. Retrieved 27 January 2021.
  55. "Ladies' letter". Northern Whig. British Newspaper Archive. 27 March 1901. p. 8 col.5. Retrieved 23 January 2021.
  56. "The Studio: Dudley Gallery Art Society". The Queen. British Newspaper Archive. 23 February 1901. p. 315 (55) col.3. Retrieved 23 January 2021.
  57. Iris (21 December 1901). "Art and artists, dogs". Gentlewoman. British Newspaper Archive. p. 256 (22). Retrieved 23 January 2021.
  58. "Water-colour drawings". The Queen. British Newspaper Archive. 14 November 1903. p. 58 col.1. Retrieved 23 January 2021.
  59. "Art and artists, The Society of Women Artists". Gentlewoman. British Newspaper Archive. 8 February 1902. p. 172 (20) col.1. Retrieved 23 January 2021.
  60. "Society of Women Artists". Morning Post. British Newspaper Archive. 4 February 1902. p. 4 col.2. Retrieved 26 January 2021.
  61. "Art and Artists, The Exhibition of the Society of Women Artists". Globe. British Newspaper Archive. 4 February 1903. p. 8 col.1. Retrieved 26 January 2021.
  62. "Art exhibitions". London Daily News. British Newspaper Archive. 1 February 1904. p. 6 col.3. Retrieved 23 January 2021.
  63. "Exhibitions". London Daily News. British Newspaper Archive. 7 June 1904. p. 1 col.3. Retrieved 22 January 2021.
  64. "Ladies' letter". Northern Whig. British Newspaper Archive. 27 January 1904. p. 2 col.5. Retrieved 23 January 2021.
  65. "Exhibitions". London Daily News. British Newspaper Archive. 4 May 1905. p. 1 col.3. Retrieved 22 January 2021.
  66. "Society of Women Artists, jubilee exhibition". Morning Post. British Newspaper Archive. 6 February 1905. p. 9 col.3. Retrieved 23 January 2021.
  67. "Art exhibitions, Society of Women Artists". Morning Post. British Newspaper Archive. 5 February 1906. p. 5 col.2. Retrieved 23 January 2021.
  68. OMV : Millar, O., 1992. The Victorian Pictures in the Collection of Her Majesty The Queen, 2 vols, Cambridge – OMV 235
  69. "Gerbils". nationaltrustcollections.org.uk. National Trust. Retrieved 26 January 2021.
  70. "Chinchillas by F.C. Fairman". nationaltrustcollections.org.uk. National Trust. Retrieved 26 January 2021.
  71. "Fairman, Frances View from Star and Garter Richmond". orleanshousegallery.org. Orleans House Gallery. Retrieved 27 January 2021.


Media related to Frances C. Fairman at Wikimedia Commons




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