Robert Noble (artist)

Summer Landscape by Robert Noble 1857-1917

Robert Noble RA ARSA PSSA (1857–1917) was a Scottish artist specialising in landscapes. He was the first President of the Society of Scottish Artists.

Life

He was born in Edinburgh on 27 January 1857, the son of Thomas Noble a railwayman and his wife, Janet Inglis.

In 1871 he was apprenticed to an engraver but also worked with his older cousin, James Campbell Noble, who was then an up-and-coming artist.[1] He encouraged him to study further and Robert went to Paris to train under Carolus-Duran. Here is genre changed from figurative to mainly landscapes.[2]

In the early 1880s he joined a small community of artists in the picturesque village of East Linton, east of Edinburgh. Here we worked alongside Thomas Bromley Blacklock and William Miller Frazer.

In 1890 he was co-founder of the Society of Scottish Artists and served as their first President. In 1903 he became an Associate of the Royal Scottish Academy and was also accepted into the Royal Academy in London.

In 1905 he was residing at 12 Queen Street in the New Town, Edinburgh.[3]

He died on 12 May 1917 in East Linton and is buried nearby in Prestonkirk churchyard.[4] He was an elder of the church there. He was an avid angler and golfer and was also a freemason.[5]

In May 2017 East Linton marked the centenary of his death.[6]

Family

His son William Balfour Noble (1891–1918) died of wounds sustained in the First World War serving with the 8th battalion Royal Scots. He died on Christmas Day 1918. He is buried beside his father.[7]

Known works

See[8]

Noble also created the Roll of Honour which hangs in Prestonkirk Church covering the years 1914 to 1916.[9]

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/2/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.