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Charles Edwin Fripp

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Charles Edwin Fripp (4 September 1854 – 1906) was an English painter and illustrator, and special war artist.[1]

"The last stand at Isandlwana," by Charles Edwin Fripp
"Battle of Tofrek"

Charles Edwin Fripp was born in London, one of the twelve children of George Arthur Fripp (1822–1895), a landscape artist, and Mary Percival. His brother Thomas W. Fripp also became a watercolourist in Canada and his brother Robert McKay Fripp worked as an architect in Vancouver.

Fripp was an Associate of the Royal Watercolour Society. He painted mainly military subjects and worked as a special artist for The Graphic and The Daily Graphic during various wars in South Africa including the Kaffir War of 1878, the Zulu War, and the Boer War; he also covered the Sino-Japanese War of 1894–95 and the Philippines campaign of the Spanish–American War in 1899. He exhibited The Last Stand at Isandhula (sic) and The Attack on General Sir John McNeill’s Force near Suakim at the Royal Academy in 1885[2] and 1886 respectively. The former is now in the National Army Museum in London, England, while the latter is in the collection of the Duke of Edinburgh's Royal Regimental Museum at Salisbury, England, having been presented to the Royal Berkshire Regiment in January 1929.

In 1889, Fripp visited British Columbia on his way to Japan. During the 1890s, he lived in Enderby.[3]

Fripp died in Montreal.

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Transcription

References

  1. ^ Charles Edwin Fripp biography and paintings Archived February 7, 2009, at the Wayback Machine (The Fripp & Pocock families of Bristol, England).
  2. ^ The Battle of Isandhlwana.
  3. ^ "Charles Edwin Fripp fonds". Royal BC Museum.

Works By

  • Fripp, Charles E., "Reminiscences of the Zulu War, 1879", Pall Mall Magazine, Vol. XX, January–April 1900, pp. 547–562.

Further reading

  • Harrington, Peter (1993). British Artists and War: The Face of Battle in Paintings and Prints, 1700-1914, London: Greenhill.
  • Hodgson, Pat (1977). The War Illustrators, London.
  • Mireux (1911). Dictionnaire des Ventes d’Art, Vol III.
  • Newall, Christopher (1987). Victorian Watercolours.
  • Roget, J. L. (1891). History of the Old Watercolour Society, Vol II.
  • Wood, Christopher (2008). Victorian Painters, Vol 1. The Text.
This page was last edited on 16 May 2022, at 00:54
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