Template:Short description Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox artist
Arthur John Balliol SalmonTemplate:Refn (1868 – 1953) was a British artist particularly noted for his illustrations and his work in pencil, chalk and pastels. He was one of the twenty leading illustrators selected by Percy V. Bradshaw for inclusion in his Art of the Illustrator.Template:Refn
Biography
Arthur John Balliol Salmon was born in Manchester, Lancashire, England on 1 June 1868.Template:R He was the son of Henry Curwen Salmon and Ellen Fennell, who had married on 6 May 1857.Template:R Template:Refn
Balliol Salmon studied for a year under Fred Brown at the Westminster School, where his fellow pupils were F. H. Townsend and Fred Pegram. Salmon continued his training, together with Fred Pegram at Paris ateliers.Template:R He trained at the Academie Julian in Paris. He lived in Glasgow and London.Template:R
He pursued a career as teacher and illustrator, notably for The Graphic. Houfe wrote in his Dictionary of Nineteenth-Century British Book Illustrators and Caricaturists (1996) that Balliol Salmon was one of the best pencil and chalk artists to work for the press in the Edwardian era.Template:R
Balliol Salmon was chosen by art instructor Percy V. Bradshaw as one of the artists to illustrate "The Art of the Illustrator", the seminal collection of twenty portfolios demonstrating six stages of a single painting or drawing by twenty different artists and published in 1918.[1]
Selected illustrations
- Sir Cosmo Duff-Gordon At The British Wreck Commissioner's Inquiry Into The Titanic Disaster - Illustrated London News, 25 May 1912 (Gouache)[2]
- Love Letter, 1908 Ink, watercolour and gouache
- Portrait of Joan Bright.[3]
- Portrait of Ada Reeve on board White Star RMS Majestic 1911
Book illustrations for the series of books by Angela Brazil
Salmon was Angela Brazil's favourite among her illustrators with his lovely elongated schoolgirls.Template:R He illustrated seven of her books in the UK.Template:R Different illustrators were used for different markets. Freeman states that Salmon's illustrations were jettisoned for comic cartoons in France and winsomeness in America.Template:R
In the following list PG indicates whether the book is available on Project Gutenberg. The list is based on searches on Jisc library hub discover,Template:Refn checked against the bibliography in Sims and Clare's Encyclopedia of Girls' School Stories.Template:R
No | Title | Published | Year | Pages (from Jisc) | On PG |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | The Jolliest Term on Record | Blackie, London | 1915 | 288 p., 8º | Template:Yes |
2 | The Luckiest Girl in the School | Blackie, London | 1916 | 296 p., 6 ill., 8º | Template:Yes |
3 | The Madcap of the School | Blackie, London | 1917 | 288 p., 8º | Template:Yes |
4 | A Patriotic Schoolgirl | Blackie, London | 1918 | 288 p., 6 ill., 8º | Template:Yes |
5 | For the School Colours | Blackie, London | 1918 | 288 p., 8º | Template:Yes |
6 | The Head Girl at the Gables | Blackie, London | 1919 | 288 p., 6 ill., 8º | Template:Yes |
7 | A Popular Schoolgirl | Blackie, London | 1920 | 288 p., 5 ill., 8º | Template:Yes |
Notes
References
External links
- ↑ Title: Balliol Salmon and His Work - The Art of The... Publisher: Press Art School, London Publication Date: 1920
- ↑ Template:Cite journal
- ↑ Template:Cite web