A Newhaven Fishwife

Alexander Roche

DESCRIPTION

In 1896 Roche moved to Edinburgh where he would have painted A Newhaven Fishwife in the little harbour, just two miles north of the city. Throughout his career, Roche displayed a prodigious talent and acute artistic antennae which meant that he responded with integrity to each new development, whether impressionism, naturalism, symbolism or narrative painting. He was also an accomplished illustrator, as revealed in the presence of the mischievous black cat in the picture. Roche became one of the Glasgow Boy stars of the 1890s commissioned to paint a mural of St Mungo  - the city’s patron saint for the new City Chambers - and winning prizes and acclaim  on the international exhibition circuit.

DETAILS
  • Artist

    Alexander Roche

  • Date

    c. 1901

  • Medium

    Oil on canvas

  • Object number

    830

  • Dimensions unframed

    127 × 111.8 cm

  • Dimensions framed

    151 × 139 cm

  • Place depicted

    Newhaven (2641637)

  • Marks

    Signed bottom right

  • Subject

    Portrait

ARTIST PROFILE

Alexander Ignatius Roche RSA, 1861-1921

Roche's father was of French origin, but he himself was born and raised in Glasgow. He attended some art classes at the Glasgow School of Art while working in an architect's office, and it was at the school that he first met and became friends with John Lavery. In the early 1880s he studied in Paris, in both the lively studios of the Académie Julian and the prestigious École des Beaux-Arts under Gérôme. However, the tuition he received was to have little impact on his style after he returned to Scotland in 1855. 

Along with Lavery and the Glasgow Boy William Kennedy, Roche was one of a number of Scottish art students living in Paris at that time. These three, like several of their contemporaries, painted at Grez-sur-Loing, which had recently become an international artists; colony much frequented by Britons and Americans. They worked directly from nature, in emulation of the Paris-based artists who had panted at nearby Barbizon fifty years earlier. 

Roche's early work was influenced by both the Barbizon School and nineteenth-century Dutch painting, but later his style changed as a result of his attendance at W.Y. MacGregor’s life classes in Glasgow and exposure to the works of Whistler. 

After returning to Glasgow, Roche moved to Dunbartonshire before settling in Edinburgh in 1896. In 1893 he visited Madrid to study the art of Velazquez. On his return to Scotland he concentrated on portraiture, becoming an accomplished portrait painter and in later years receiving several commissions in America.