" porthmeor beach " a sketch, by william holt yates titcomb.
artists signature to the top right corner and inscribed to my friend r.e, griffin in the lower left.
oil on wooden panel with the start of a painting on the reverse.
presented on an artists table top easel.
size ... 450mm x 330m
reverend r.e.griffin to whom the painting is dedicated assisted at the wedding of st. ives artists William titcomb and jessie Morison at st. ives parish church 4th April 1892. griffin later became vicar of halsetown. he remained a close friend of the titcombs, this painting was part of an extensive collection of art work by named local st.ives artists owned by griffin. the painting remained with griffins descendants until being sold by bonhams auctioneers, par in 2008.
William holt Yates titcomb .... born in Cambridge (22 February, 1858), the artist attended Westminster School, then studied art at South Kensington and at Antwerp with Charles Verlat (1879). In 1880 he travelled to Burma where his father was Bishop of Rangoon, and produced highly finished, intricate works with (for him) a new set of colour values. Next he studied at Julian's in Paris, under Boulanger and Lefebvre, and went on to the new Herkomer's at Bushey, staying for the full two years. The social-realism of his later work indicates Herkomer's great influence. In 1887, he settled in St Ives, his reputation building from Primitive Methodists at Prayer, St Ives exhibited at the RA (1889), on a theme of the importance of religion to the lives of fisherfolk, to which he returned again and again.as mentioned, William married a fellow artist, Jessie Morison in 1892 (St Ives Marriage Register, 4 Feb 1892 by Banns), and their children, Frank and Loveday, were born in 1898 and 1900 respectively.
Both he and his wife Jessie exhibited a painting each in the Whitechapel Exhibition of 1902. Believing German education to be superior at that time, they moved to Dusseldorf in 1905 but with the rise of nationalism there they returned to Bristol in 1909. His final major oil, a commission, was John Wesley preaching to the Mayor and Corporation of Bristol 16 March 1788 that was exhibited at the RA in 1918. During the 1920s the Titcombs travelled extensively throughout Europe, with several extended stays in Venice, he working in watercolours and selling wherever they went. In 1921 it appears that he also spent some time painting in Polperro. In 1925 he staged an exhibition of 89 watercolours at Walker's Gallery in New Bond Street, which was well received and visited by the Queen. With William's health declining they moved first to Menton but returned finally to Bristol where he died, on 7th September 1930. He was a humble man, not interested in self-promotion or art politics, and he not only worked abroad a great deal, but kept out of the public gaze. David Tovey's outstanding historical work on the St Ives painters and their lives has done much to bring about a renewed appreciation for Titcomb's talents.
( thank you to the Cornwall artists index for the biography )