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Frederick James McNamara Evans
Portrait of a Cornish Fisherman. Historical Social Record of Fishing Industry.

About the Item

Frederick James McNamara Evans. English ( b.1859 - d.1929 ). Portrait of a Cornish Fisherman Watercolor. Signed. Image size 10.2 inches x 8.1 inches ( 26cm x 20.5cm ). Frame size 16.9 inches x 14.6 inches ( 43cm x 37cm ). Available for sale; this original painting is by Frederick Evans and dates from around 1900. The watercolor is presented and supplied in a sympathetic contemporary frame (which is shown in these photographs), mounted using conservation materials and behind glass. This antique painting is in very good condition, commensurate with its age. It wants for nothing and is supplied ready to hang and display. The watercolor is signed lower right. Frederick James McNamara Evans was the son of the artist Henry McNamara Evans. He was born in London on 7th September 1859. He studied art at the Royal Institute schools in London. In the late 1880s he moved to Penzance and joined the growing colony of artists who became known as the Newlyn School of artists. He worked mainly in watercolors. Evans is best known for his detailed head and shoulder studies of Newlyn’s fisherfolk. Some say that fellow artists used Evan’s paintings as source material for their own work. Evans exhibited from 1886 and his works were shown at the Royal Academy 4 times and at the New Water Color Society 11 times. He was at his happiest painting the old fisherfolk of Newlyn and its surrounds. He died in Redinnick Terrace, Penzance in 1929. © Big Sky Fine Art This original watercolor work, now well over a century old, captures the personality and likeness of a Cornish fisherman, one of this dying breed of rare men for whom life was hard and dangerous. It is an honest example of Evans work. The watercolor is a head and shoulders portrait; the fisherman is of mature years, with character and experience etched into his features. He has a kind, wise expression, a white beard and bushy eyebrows. He wears a brown sou’wester and a red neckerchief.
  • Creator:
    Frederick James McNamara Evans (1859 - 1929, English)
  • Dimensions:
    Height: 16.93 in (43 cm)Width: 14.57 in (37 cm)
  • Medium:
  • Movement & Style:
  • Period:
  • Condition:
    This antique painting is in very good condition, commensurate with its age. It wants for nothing and is supplied ready to hang and display.
  • Gallery Location:
    Sutton Poyntz, GB
  • Reference Number:
    1stDibs: LU489314110892
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From that time, she retained one or more addresses in London, but spent most of her time in a cottage in Sussex, or abroad in Italy or Spain. In 1913 Chambers donated Dante Gabriel Rossetti’s plaster death mask to the National Portrait Gallery. Alice Chambers died at Pomona House, Fulham on 5 May 1920. © Big Sky Fine Art There is a tantalizing link between the artist and the sitter of this drawing; they were both remarkable women in their time, with only five years between them in age, and they had the same lifespan of 65 years. They would have mixed in similar social circles and from what is known of their individual lives it is easy to imagine that they would have admired and respected each other. They obviously spent time together when Rebecca sat for her portrait. From the appearance of the subject, it can be reasonably estimated that the picture was created around 1880-85, when the artist would have been around 25-30 and the subject around 30-35. 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