Alexander Brownlie Docharty
Alexander Brownlie Docharty (1862–1940) was a Scottish painter, mainly in oils. He was the second son of Joseph Docharty and Elizabeth Brownlie. Joseph Docharty was a designer of calico prints; Alexander left school at the age of thirteen to join his father. He studied part-time at the Glasgow School of Art,[1] attending Robert Greenlees' evening classes.
In 1878 Docharty’s watercolour On The Cart- Pollockshaws was exhibited at the Royal Glasgow Institute of the Fine Arts. The Royal Academy accepted his painting Arran Cottages for exhibition in 1882.
In the early 1880s Docharty was a designer for Inglis and Wakefield, a printing firm based at Busby. He left that firm some time before 1885, when he was based at James Docharty's studio in Bath Street, Glasgow. James was Alexander's uncle.
Docharty moved to Paris in 1894 to study at the Academie Julien under Benjamin Constant and Jean-Paul Laurens. He subsequently lived at Kilkerran, Ayrshire.[2] His Glen Falloch was exhibited in 1906 at the Glasgow Fine Arts Institute.[3]
References
- Halsby, Julian (1990). "Alexander Brownlie Docharty, 1862-1940". Venice, the Artist's Vision: A Guide to British and American Painters. Unicorn. ISBN 9780906290354.
- "Alexander Brownlie Docharty". Glasgow Museums Collections. Glasgow Museums. Retrieved 14 August 2014.
- "The Royal Glasgow Institute Exhibition". The Magazine of Fine Arts. G. Newnes. 1906. p. 52.