431:
69:
389:
tone and chicness of brushwork with a good deal of old-fashioned likeness-making. His work, however, is somewhat lacking in that straightforward, if often undistinguished, grasp of character which gives much old-fashioned art an interest of its own, and frequently it fails to reach the conventional
390:
distinction possessed by much modern portraiture. Still, this combination of qualities makes his portraiture acceptable to those who care for neither of these elements alone, and, a scion of a
426:
he secured a lively and expressive rendering of the faces; just the qualities which Mr. David Neave missed, for his success with accessories seems to beguile his brush away from the sitters.
311:
We cannot leave the exhibition without noting the astonishingly successful treatment of light in the speaking portrait of Madame
Besnard, full of fine drawing, ease, and originality, which
572:
203:(1996), Philip Hoare writes of "...late nineteenth-century enthusiasts of boy-love; writers, artists and Catholic converts inclined to intellectual paedophilia, among them Wilde,
110:(1846–1923) and his wife Jane Maitland Stewart, and the grandson of Robert Johnstone Douglas of Lockerbie, himself the son of Henry Alexander Douglas, a brother of the
347:"Mr. Sholto Johnstone Douglas exhibited a collection of his portraits. The artist is apparently a prey to indecision in the matter of style, many influences, from
281:, arranged for the author R. W. Semon to take Douglas with him on a visit to New Guinea. Semon wrote "This young Scotsman was just then staying with his uncle on
899:
524:
981:
119:
111:
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1006:
410:, of Sholto Douglas and E. A. Borthwick, and of a few others, are more on lines which have become a convention with the younger school."
223:
123:
115:
996:
986:
647:
270:
555:
664:
880:
685:
568:
289:
258:, which "...portrayed, with a truly poetic sense of atmosphere, the subtle half-tones of his native countryside".
1001:
991:
896:
527:, he does not pay mere lip-service to art, his sensitivity is no pose, and he tries to rid himself of illusions.
118:
Marquesses of
Queensberry. His paternal grandmother, Lady Jane Douglas (1811–1881), was herself a daughter of
943:
535:
Ian Brodie, 24th Brodie of Brodie, was accepted by the
British government from Brodie's heir in lieu of tax.
386:
320:
955:
819:
544:
282:
293:
949:
917:
The
Complete Peerage or a History of the House of Lords and All its Members from the Earliest Times
150:
97:
588:
348:
89:
884:
435:
274:
859:
519:
Though
Marchbanks has many of the external characteristics and some of the attitudes of the
976:
971:
103:
839:
A Concise
Catalogue of Paintings, Drawings and Sculpture of the First World War, 1914-1918
8:
508:
471:
354:
312:
297:
216:
165:
131:
73:
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876:
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576:
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135:
100:
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and "...led a long life notable for its unassuming expression of civilized values".
332:
903:
507:
Elsie Bonita Adams has compared
Douglas to the character of Eugene Marchbanks in
403:
235:
204:
139:
122:, so she was her husband's first cousin. Douglas's third cousin and contemporary
543:
On 19 April 1913, Douglas married
Bettina, the daughter of Harman Grisewood, of
285:, being on his way back to Europe after a voyage to Australia and New Zealand."
919:(Volume 14: Addenda & Corrigenda) (Stroud: Sutton Publishing, 1998), p. 217
824:
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34:
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575:(1961–1990), and Lady Ann Mary Elizabeth Craven (born 1959), the wife of Dr.
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On 9 November 1912, under the headline 'Sholto J. Douglas Coming Here', the
520:
93:
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From 1926 to 1939, Douglas lived in France and painted many landscapes in
467:
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266:
169:
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57:
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Elizabeth
Gwendolen Teresa Johnstone-Douglas (1916–2011), who married
782:
705:
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85:
68:
42:
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422:"Mr. Sholto Douglas experimented perhaps beyond his powers, but in
251:
38:
31:
746:
I Will Plant Me a Tree: an
Illustrated History of Gresham's School
331:
In June 1907, Douglas held an exhibition of his portraits at the
239:
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158:
828:
dated 10 November 1912 on its web site, accessed 23 January 2009
490:
336:
189:
146:
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county family, he has painted many people of social standing.
173:
154:
222:
He was at home in Scotland as a painter and as a sportsman,
842:
185:
53:
845:
for the Imperial War Museum, 2nd edition, 1963), pp. 89-90
759:
Temple Bar: A London Magazine for Town and Country Readers
757:
Sala, George Augustus, & Edmund Hodgson Yates (eds.),
381:(1908), James Lewis Caw wrote of Douglas's portrait work:
215:
As a portrait painter, Douglas belonged to the period of
720:
In the Australian Bush and on the Coast of the Coral Sea
661:
Wilde's Devoted Friend: A Life of Robert Ross, 1869-1918
455:, having "a number of commissions to paint portraits in
246:
by being the first artist to hang a painting there of a
184:. In 1895, when during his trial Wilde was released on
680:(University of Chicago Press, 1996, new edition 1998,
627:
Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Landed Gentry
315:
has given us, nor the poetically suggestive beauty of
531:
In March 2005, a portrait by Douglas of the Scottish
319:
by Sholto Douglas, in which a reminiscence of one of
126:(1844–1900) was famous for the rules of the sport of
551:Robert Arthur Sholto Johnstone-Douglas (1914-1985)
789:(Edinburgh: T. C. & E. C. Jack, 1908), p. 432
963:
906:at mla.gov.uk web site, accessed 22 January 2008
485:he had lunched with Douglas and his wife at the
451:reported Douglas's sailing from London for the
168:, or 'Bosie', was a close friend of the writer
787:Scottish Painting, Past and Present, 1620-1908
567:Through his daughter, he was a grandfather of
379:Scottish Painting, Past and Present, 1620-1908
373:, however, were portraits of some distinction.
887:at books.google.com, accessed 25 January 2008
862:at books.google.com, accessed 23 January 2009
667:at books.google.com, accessed 22 January 2009
398:However, Caw says elsewhere in the same book
120:Charles Douglas, 6th Marquess of Queensberry
22:(3 December 1871 – 10 March 1958), known as
931:at william1.co.uk, accessed 22 January 2009
538:
207:, Sholto Douglas and Lord Alfred Douglas."
837:Blaikley, Ernest, & Noble, Frankland,
609:
607:
605:
603:
462:His work also includes many paintings of "
616:at panvertu.com, accessed 22 January 2008
176:when accused of "posing as a somdomite" (
124:John Douglas, 9th Marquess of Queensberry
80:. Douglas stood surety for Wilde's bail.
429:
67:
748:(London: James & James, 2002) p. 25
696:
694:
600:
982:Alumni of the Slade School of Fine Art
964:
625:Burke, Bernard, & Townend, Peter,
547:. They had one son and one daughter:
172:. When Wilde sued Bosie's father for
950:Sholto Johnstone Douglas (1871-1958)
944:Sholto Johnstone DOUGLAS (1871-1958)
875:(Ohio State University Press, 1986,
733:The Dictionary of National Biography
691:
629:v. 2 (Burke's Peerage, 1972), p. 260
288:In 1900, Douglas painted the author
385:Mr Sholto Johnstone Douglas unites
13:
1012:20th-century Scottish male artists
1007:19th-century Scottish male artists
556:William Craven, 6th Earl of Craven
523:-artist such as Sholto Douglas or
474:has fifty-two of these paintings.
14:
1023:
937:
569:Thomas Craven, 7th Earl of Craven
188:, Sholto Johnstone Douglas stood
958:at arcadja.com/auctions web site
722:(London: Macmillan, 1899) p. 307
573:Simon Craven, 8th Earl of Craven
210:
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813:
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477:In December 1921, the novelist
88:, a member of the aristocratic
20:Robert Sholto Johnstone Douglas
997:20th-century Scottish painters
987:19th-century Scottish painters
873:Bernard Shaw and the Aesthetes
856:The Journals of Arnold Bennett
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725:
712:
670:
653:
632:
619:
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292:. His portrait of his friend
242:. He came to attention at the
1:
820:Sholto J. Douglas Coming Here
594:
481:noted in his journal that on
250:, but was best known for his
238:brought back from a visit to
63:
7:
663:(Lennard Publishing, 1990)
582:
545:Daylesford, Gloucestershire
10:
1028:
493:to meet the Polish singer
441:in dazzle camouflage, 1918
367:Study for a Portrait Group
718:Semon, Richard Wolfgang,
261:In 1897, Douglas visited
182:downfall and imprisonment
956:Sholto Johnstone Douglas
946:at artprice.com web site
915:Hammond, Peter W., ed.,
808:The International Studio
771:The International Studio
701:Sholto Johnstone Douglas
678:Noel Coward: A Biography
642:(Alfred A. Knopf, 1988,
614:Sholto Johnstone Douglas
539:Marriage and descendants
416:The International Studio
341:The International Studio
201:Noel Coward: A Biography
151:Slade School of Fine Art
98:Arthur Johnstone-Douglas
28:Sholto Johnstone Douglas
897:Acceptance Reports 2005
589:List of British artists
300:, hangs at the school.
196:500 of the bail money.
180:), this led to Wilde's
145:Douglas studied art in
37:, a painter chiefly of
1002:Artists from Edinburgh
992:Scottish male painters
952:at artnet.com web site
735:(1950 edition), p. 113
529:
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329:
81:
26:, or more formally as
902:22 March 2009 at the
871:Adams, Elsie Bonita,
854:Flower, Newmas, ed.,
810:, v. 37 (1909) p. 147
773:, v. 32 (1907) p. 143
517:
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420:
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309:
275:Premier of Queensland
130:. Another cousin was
71:
761:v. 129 (1904), p. 87
96:. He was the son of
84:Douglas was born in
858:(Read Books, 2006)
822:, extract from the
509:George Bernard Shaw
472:Imperial War Museum
418:said of a painting
217:John Singer Sargent
166:Lord Alfred Douglas
132:Lady Florence Dixie
74:Lord Alfred Douglas
731:Lee, Sidney, ed.,
659:Borland, Maureen,
443:
402:"The portraits of
363:Mrs. Russell Bryde
357:, being apparent.
307:magazine reported
303:In 1904, London's
90:Queensberry family
82:
48:In 1895, he stood
648:978-0-394-55484-6
638:Ellman, Richard,
577:Lionel Tarassenko
438:Empress of Russia
254:and his Scottish
164:Douglas's cousin
136:war correspondent
72:Douglas's cousin
35:figurative artist
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298:Gresham's School
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277:and Governor of
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283:Thursday Island
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448:New York Times
434:Photograph of
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24:Sholto Douglas
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571:(1957–1983),
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487:Hotel Bristol
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466:" during the
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453:United States
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425:
424:A Day in June
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269:. His uncle
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355:Wilson Steer
351:
346:
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327:is aroused."
324:
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304:
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287:
271:John Douglas
260:
221:
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198:
177:
163:
153:and also in
144:
94:Clan Douglas
83:
47:
27:
23:
19:
18:
977:1958 deaths
972:1871 births
798:Caw, p. 431
640:Oscar Wilde
563:Descendants
408:Fiddes Watt
387:Whistlerian
343:noted that
333:Alpine Club
317:The Sisters
290:John Buchan
273:, a former
267:New Zealand
170:Oscar Wilde
78:Oscar Wilde
58:Oscar Wilde
966:Categories
595:References
558:, in 1954.
483:Boxing Day
470:, and the
323:'s lovely
313:M. Besnard
305:Temple Bar
279:New Guinea
256:landscapes
234:. He kept
64:Early life
43:landscapes
841:(London:
706:The Times
414:In 1909,
359:Marquise?
325:Nocturnes
263:Australia
252:portraits
248:motor car
149:, at the
108:Lockerbie
86:Edinburgh
39:portraits
900:Archived
688:), p. 34
583:See also
521:aesthete
515:(1898):
511:'s play
502:Provence
457:New York
321:Whistler
224:shooting
52:for the
32:Scottish
30:, was a
929:Tudor 5
513:Candida
240:Iceland
232:sailing
199:In his
159:Antwerp
116:seventh
885:p. 107
879:
684:
665:p. 206
646:
491:Cannes
369:, and
349:Romsey
337:London
236:ponies
228:riding
190:surety
147:London
134:, the
128:boxing
50:surety
533:laird
174:libel
155:Paris
112:sixth
877:ISBN
860:p. 7
843:HMSO
682:ISBN
644:ISBN
406:and
265:and
230:and
192:for
186:bail
157:and
138:and
114:and
76:and
54:bail
41:and
883:),
489:in
459:".
436:SS
377:In
353:to
339:.
335:in
178:sic
106:of
56:of
968::
785:,
693:^
602:^
579:.
504:.
497:.
365:,
361:,
226:,
161:.
142:.
104:JP
101:DL
60:.
45:.
650:)
194:£
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