Frank Holl | |
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Born | Francis Montague Holl 4 July 1845 London, England |
Died | 31 July 1888 London, England | (aged 43)
Resting place | Highgate Cemetery |
Nationality | British |
Education | University College School |
Occupation | Painter |
Parent | Francis Holl (father) |
Francis Montague Holl RA (London 4 July 1845 – 31 July 1888 London) was a British painter, specialising in somewhat sentimental paintings with a moment from a narrative situation, often drawing on the trends of social realism and the problem picture in Victorian painting. He was also, especially in his later years when the demand for social realism slackened, a portrait painter, mostly of official-type portraits of distinguished and therefore elderly men, including members of the royal family.[1]
He died in his early 40s, which some contemporaries attributed to overwork, as he had been very busy in the last twenty years of his life. His reputation fell considerably after his death, and the exhibition at the Watts Gallery in 2013 and its catalogue were the first such attention he had received for a century.[2]