- Robert Bateman (artist)
Robert Bateman (1842–1922) was an English painter, illustrator, sculptor, architect and scholar.
He was the third son of
James Bateman (1812–1897), the accomplished horticulturist and landowner, who builtBiddulph Grange and its gardens, inStaffordshire .Robert attended the
Royal Academy schools in the 1860s, and from about 1870 he was the leader of a group of artists inspired by the art ofEdward Burne-Jones . Sadly, it is a group about which little is now known (see: Christian, J. "The Last Romantics" (1989))His key paintings are "The Dead Knight" (1870) and "The Pool of Bethesda" (1877).
Walter Crane , in his "An Artist's Reminiscences" (1907), described Bateman's painting as of.... "a magic world of romance and pictured poetry ... a twilight world of dark mysterious woodlands, haunted streams, meads of deep green starred with burning flowers, veiled in a dim and mystic light.""The Pool of Bethesda" is at the
Yale Centre of British Art . "The Dead Knight" is in a private collection, but there is a fine large color reproduction in the book "The Last Romantics" (1989).Robert married the daughter of the Dean of
Lichfield in 1883, and became a wealthy owner of property and land. His fortune led him to become a notedphilanthropist of the time. He and his wife Caroline lived nearMuch Wenlock ,Shropshire , at the 16th-CenturyBenthall Hall ; now a National Trust property.Bateman was a founder of the
Society of Painters in Tempera in 1901. He is also said to have been an architect, although nothing is known about this aspect of his talent.Bateman was also noted as a naturalist (corresponding with
Charles Darwin ), a botanical illustrator, sculptor, book illustrator, and an Italian scholar. He also left a horticultural legacy, in his planting of the gardens at Bentham Hall from 1890–1906 — much of his garden design there is still extant and is now maintained by the National Trust as part of Benthall Hall.External links
* [http://www.virtual-shropshire.co.uk/visitor_guide/benthall_hall_guide.shtml Benthall Hall]
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