Horatio H. Couldery
(1832 - 1893)

 


The Little Mischief Makers
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Couldery was a Victorian artist who specialized in painting cats and dogs.  He lived in Lewisham, Kent and was a member of a large family of artists – five in all.

 

Although an artist, his father had second thoughts as to Horatio’s profession and subsequently placed him in apprenticeship with a cabinet maker.  However, his love for art soon won out and at the age of 25 he enrolled in the Royal Academy Schools; exhibiting his first work there in 1864.  During his day, he was a popular artist and exhibited works in many of the important exhibition halls, including the Royal Academy; Royal Society of British Artists; British Institution and at the Graphic Exhibition of Animal Paintings in 1882.

 

In 1875 Couldery exhibited A Fascinating Tail at the Royal Academy.  In the Academy Notes, John Ruskin had the following comments: quite the most skillful, minute, and Dureresque painting in the Exhibition, not to be seen without a lens: - and in its sympathy with kitten nature … and its tact and sensitivity to the finest gradations of kittenly meditation and motion, - unsurpassable.

 

Today examples of Couldery’s work can be seen in the collections of the Norwich Art Gallery and the Nottingham Art Gallery.

 
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