Eden Upton Eddis
Eden Upton Eddis (9 May 1812 – 7 April 1901) was a British portrait artist.
Eden Upton Eddis | |
---|---|
Born | 9 May 1812 |
Died | 7 April 1901 |
Nationality | British |
Life
Eden was born in Newington Green in 1812, his brother Edward became a hymn writer.[1]
Eden enrolled at the Royal Academy Schools in 1828.[2] From the age of 25 until he was nearly 70 his work was regularly exhibited regularly at the Royal Academy between 1837 and 1881,[3] and is best known for his portraits, which included many of well-known people; the National Portrait Gallery in London holds a drawing of him by Walker Hodgson.
Among the subjects of his portraits were the historian Lord Macaulay, Bishop Charles James Blomfield, Archbishop Sumner, the essayist and fashionable cleric Sydney Smith, the sculptor Francis Leggatt Chantrey and Peter Mark Roget the compiler of the original thesaurus.[3] He died in 1901 aged 88 at Shalford near Guildford.
Legacy
Eddis has over 100 works in the National Portrait Gallery[3] and 30 paintings in public collections in the United Kingdom.[4]
References
- Edward Wilton Eddis, Cyberhymnal.org, retrieved 25 October 2014
- some history and images, National Portrait Gallery
- Eden Upton Eddis, National Portrait Gallery
- 35 artworks by or after Eden Upton Eddis at the Art UK site
External links
- Media related to Eden Upton Eddis at Wikimedia Commons