John Callcott Horsley (1817 - 1903). John Callcott Horsley was an English Academic painter of genre and historical scenes, illustrator, and designer of the first Christmas card. He was a member of the artist's colony in Cranbrook. Horsley was born in London, the son of William Horsley, the musician, and grand-nephew of Sir Augustus Callcott. His sister Mary Elizabeth Horsley wed the famous British engineer Isambard Kingdom Brunel in 1836. Horsley was mentored by William Mulready and Augustus Wall Callcot who sent him at age thirteen to study at Dr Henry Sass's academy where he met D.G Rossetti, J. Millais and W.P. Frith; in his biography Horsley recalls Dr Sass as being vain and untalented. Following preparatory school Horsley studied painting at the Royal Academy schools where he met Thomas Webster. In 1836 he exhibited The Pride of the Village at the Royal Academy. Horsley married Elvira Walter in 1846 with whom he had three sons: Edward, Frank, and Harry. Elvira died of consumption in 1852 followed by the deaths of Edward and Harry in 1854 and Frank in 1857 due to scarlet fever. Horsley remarried to Rosamund Haden who came from a family of distinguished surgeons, her father Charles Haden had a practice in Sloan Street and her brother Francis Seymour Haden was a surgeon and etcher who founded the Royal Society of Painters, Etchers and Engravers in 1880. Rosamund gave birth to Walter, Hugh, Victor, Emma, Fanny, Gerald and Rosamund. Gerald grew up to be an architect, Walter an artist also studying at the RA Schools, and Victor a surgeon. Sir Victor Horsley, became famous as a surgeon and neuropathologist, and a prominent supporter of the cause of experimental research. Horsley and Rosamund had four more children: Emma, Fanny, Gerald and Rosamund, losing Hugh and Emma to scarlet fever. After his wedding to Rosamund in 1854 Horsley and his new wife toured the Midlands for five months to establish contacts with wealthy industrialists for portrait commissions. Horsley moved into Willesley, his house in Cranbrook in 1861, joining the Cranbrook Colony; whilst maintaining a home in London. The architect Richard Shaw adds .tall chimneys and cosy inglenooks. in the Jacobean style to Willesley. Horsley's paintings were largely of historical subjects set in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, influenced by the Dutch masters Pieter de Hooch and Vermeer. Examples are Malvolio, L'Allegro and il Penseroso, Le Jour des Morts and A Scene from Don Quixote. As a young artist Horsley was patronised buy the collector John Sheepshanks, who bought two of Horsley's paintings: The Rival Performers, and Youth and Age; both of which are now part of the V&A collection. In 1843 his cartoon of St Augustine Preaching won a prize in the competition to provide interior decorations for Palace of Westminster. This led to his being selected in 1844 he was as one of the six painters commissioned to execute frescoes there. He painted Religion in the House of Lords, Henry V assuming the Crown and Satan touched by Ithuriel's Spear while whispering evil dreams to Eve. In 1864 he became a Royal Academician. Horsley had much to do with organizing the winter exhibitions of Old Masters at Burlington House after 1870. Horsley was rector and treasurer of the Royal Academy from 1875 to 1890 and 1882 to 1897 respectively. He earned the nickname Clothes-Horsley for his opposition to the use of nude life models. When, during the 1880s, the example of the French Salon began to affect the Academy exhibitors, and paintings of the nude became the fashion, he protested against the innovation, and his attitude caused Punch to give him the sobriquet of Mr J. C Horsley. Protests against the nude in 1885 assumed a variety of forms: Moore's White Hydrangea was damaged by a scratching fiend during the summer exhibition and life studies executed by Academy students were stolen. However, it was a letter printed in The Times on 20 May which proved the catalyst for igniting a national controversy around the exhibition of the nude. The letter was titled A Woman's Plea and signed British Matron. In fact it was penned by J. C. Horsley. He resigned from the academy in 1897, and became a retired Academician. Horsley designed the first ever Christmas card, commissioned by Henry Cole. It caused some controversy because it depicted a small child drinking wine. He also designed the Horsley envelope, a pre-paid envelope that was the precursor to the postage stamp.
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