James Cadenhead

James Cadenhead RSA (12 January 1858 – 22 January 1927) was a Scottish landscape and portrait painter.[1]

Lady with Japanese Screen and Goldfish (1886)
Deeside by James Cadenhead
James Cadenhead's grave, Warriston Cemetery

Life and work

Cadenhead was born in Aberdeen, the only son of the procurator-fiscal, and received his early training in art in that city, showing an aptitude for black and white drawing, etching and portraiture. He was encouraged in his art endeavours by Dr. John Forbes White (art collector and photographer, and brother-in-law of surgeon and photographer, Thomas Keith) who aroused his interest in the old masters, and artists of the French Barbizon and modern Dutch schools. He went on to the Royal Scottish Academy schools in Edinburgh, then, in 1882, to Paris to study at the atelier of Carolus-Duran. There he was also strongly influenced by the work of Jean-Charles Cazin (18401901).[2]

Cadenhead returned to Aberdeen in 1884, moving to Edinburgh in 1891. In 1893, he was elected a member of the Royal Scottish Society of Painters in Watercolour, and in 1902 was made an Associate of the Royal Scottish Academy, and later a full member.[3] He became Chairman of the Society of Scottish Artists, and was one of the original committee of the Scottish Modern Arts Association.[2] He exhibited regularly at the Royal Scottish Academy and Royal Glasgow Institute of the Fine Arts, and was elected a Scottish Royal Academician in 1921.[1]

Amongst his portraits is one of his mother entitled Lady with Japanese Screen and Goldfish (1886; City Art Gallery, Edinburgh). Cadenhead lived at 14 Ramsay Garden: in the artistic and intellectual colony established by Patrick Geddes close to Edinburgh Castle at the top of the Royal Mile.[4] He was closely associated with Geddes' Fin de Siècle Scottish cultural revival, contributing illustrations to all four volumes of The Evergreen: A Northern Seasonal published by Patrick Geddes and Colleagues between 1895 and 1897.[5][6][7][8] He also took the role of Fionn mac Cumhaill in the Celtic section of the Scottish National Pageant staged in Edinburgh, at Aberdour Castle and at the University of Glasgow in 1908.[9]

In later life he lived at 15 Inverleith Terrace in north Edinburgh.[10]

He died in Edinburgh in 1927. He is buried in Warriston Cemetery on the upper east-west path, near the East Gate.

References

  1. Biography Archived 2008-12-25 at the Wayback Machine ("Greyfriars Bobby)
  2. International studio, volume 46 (1897) pp. 10-20.
  3. James Cadenhead Archived 2011-05-25 at the Wayback Machine (Royal Scottish Academy).
  4. Edinburgh and Leith Post Office Directory 1900-1901
  5. The Evergreen: A Northern Seasonal: The Book of Spring, Patrick Geddes and Colleagues, Edinburgh (1895)
  6. The Evergreen: A Northern Seasonal: The Book of Autumn, Patrick Geddes and Colleagues, Edinburgh (1895)
  7. The Evergreen: A Northern Seasonal: The Book of Summer, Patrick Geddes and Colleagues (Edinburgh (1896)
  8. The Evergreen: A Northern Seasonal: The Book of Winter, Patrick Geddes and Colleagues, Edinburgh (1896)
  9. Michael Shaw (2019), The Fin-de-Siècle Scottish Revival: Romance, Decadence and Celtic Identity, Edinburgh University Press, p. 237
  10. Edinburgh and Leith Post Office Directory 1911-12

Further reading

  • Kenneth Cadenhead. James Cadenhead: Keeping his Memory Green (K. Cadenhead, 2003).
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