James Coutts Michie ARSA (19 July 1859 – 18 December 1919) was a Scottish painter who specialised in landscapes and portraits.[1]
Scottish painter (1859–1919)
For other people named James Coutts, see James Coutts (disambiguation).
James Coutts Michie
Overview
He was born James Michie at Marywell in the parish of Birse near Aboyne, Scotland, the third son of a merchant, Harry Michie, and Elizabeth Coutts, who had eleven children.[2] He studied under Joseph Farquharson at the Trustee Academy in Edinburgh and later with Carolus-Duran in Paris. He travelled in France, Italy, Spain, Morocco, living in Tangier for several years[3] before settling in England about 1893. Several of his paintings are in the Aberdeen Art Gallery. Amongst these is a painting of Elizabeth Crombie Duthie (1885) who in 1883 gave Duthie Park to the city of Aberdeen in memory of her uncle and brother. Coutts Michie was a member of the Aberdeen Artist's Society and the Society of Scottish Artists. Later he became an adviser to the collector George McCulloch and married his widow, Mary, in 1908.[1] In 1910 they had a country house built at Haslemere in Surrey which they named Oak Hall. Later Oak Hall, which is now a Grade II listed building, became the Wispers School for Girls which closed in 2008 and has been converted into retirement apartments.
McCulloch's art collection included a number of paintings by Coutts Michie,[4] Home from the Hill, now in the Broken Hill Art Gallery NSW, Portrait of Mrs George McCulloch, Harvest, Autumn Sunshine, and a sketch of Mrs Alexander McCulloch.
Mary, his widow, donated a portrait of Coutts Michie by John Pettie to the Aberdeen Art Gallery in 1920.[5] The image above is part of a larger photograph showing Coutts Michie seated on the edge of a table in front of a large painting The Daphnephoria by Lord Leighton.
Coutts Michie's sister Mary Michie was a watercolourist, flower painter and art teacher;[1] she lived and worked mostly in Aberdeen.
Timeline
1882 Awarded Travelling Scholarship by Royal Scottish Academy [6]
1888 'Autumn Landscape' and the 'Snake Charmer' exhibited [7]
1905 Treasurer - Robert Brough Art Scholarship in memory of Robert Brough ARSA who was killed in the Midland Scotch express accident in January 1905.[16] The express had run into the back of a mail train in fog and caught fire.
1908 On the organising committee of the Franco British Exhibition[17]
Sir John McFadyean LLD, abt 1907, Royal College of Veterinary Science
Snow Scene, abt 1905, Art Gallery of New South Wales
Street in Tangier, Aberdeen Art Gallery
Winter in Surrey, Walker Art Gallery, Liverpool
Winter Scene, Wolverhampton Art Gallery
Woman with Pigeon, 1887/89, Angus Council
A Young Fisherman, 1880
A Glade in a Birch Wood, 1894
Normandy Orchard, 1885
Appreciation
His landscape paintings mostly appear to lack the detail of some Scottish painters of his time such as James Guthrie who painted 'To Pastures New', but the portrait of his friend Sir David Murray radiates warmth and is charming. That said, he contributed to the world of art in other ways by helping to organize exhibitions both at home and abroad.
Citations
Christopher Woods, 1995
Scottish index of births
Who's Who
Royal Academy Winter Exhibition, 1909
Private communication from Aberdeen art gallery
Dundee Courier 22 Jun 1882
The Times 19 Nov 1888
The Times 5 May 1890
The Times 30 Mar 1893
The Times Feb22 1895
The Times 18 Feb 1896
The Times 28 Feb 1898
The Times 21 Feb 1899
The Times 29 Nov 1899
The Times 3 April 1904
The Times 4 April 1905
The Times 12 May 1908
The Times 16 May 1910
The Times 4 Apr 1911
The Times 30 Mar 1915
The Times 23 Dec 1919
References
Wood Christopher, Dictionary of British Art Vol IV, Victorian Painters, 1995
Who was Who, on-line edition
Catalogue of the Royal Academy Winter Exhibition, 1909
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