Designer Desire: Mary Ellen Best

Montage of paintings by Mary Ellen Best

I love going out for a walk around dusk, when people have turned on their lights, but haven’t yet drawn the curtains. You can get a sneaky look inside and see how they’ve furnished and decorated their homes. I think that’s why I was first attracted to the works of this week’s artist.

Mary Ellen Best (1809-1891) was an English watercolour artist, primarily concentrating on English – and later on, German – domestic interior scenes. She was born in York, the daughter of Dr Charles Best, a physician who worked at the York Lunatic Asylum (now Bootham Park Hospital). Her mother was Mary Norcliffe Dalton, the daughter of a Yorkshire landowner. She was brought up, along with her younger sister, Rosamond, in Little Blake Street (now Duncombe Place) near the west end of York Minster.

Best showed artistic promise from a young age, having art lessons at boarding school during her teenage years. As a young woman, she produced and sold many paintings and also exhibited widely.

As well as her own home, Best painted a number of studies of the Norcliffe family’s East Yorkshire home, Langton Park. There are many well-to-do town & country house drawing rooms, sitting rooms, dining rooms, music rooms etc. But it’s the ‘below stairs’ views that I find most interesting; the servant’s quarters, the kitchens and the more modest cottage interiors.

After the death of her parents and grandmother, from whom she inherited handsome sums each time, Best’s artistic output decreased. After she married German schoolmaster, Johann Anton Phillip Sary in 1840, the number of paintings she produced lessened even further until they virtually dried up after giving birth to and raising a son and daughter.

In 1985, a biography entitled The World of Mary Ellen Best was written by Caroline Davidson. In it, she calculated that Best produced over 1,500 paintings in her lifetime. Copies of the book are available at Abe Books and Amazon.

You can also find many more details about life on the Women of York blog and essay, Negotiating Identity: Mary Ellen Best and The Status of Female Victorian Artists.

Self-portrait by Mary Ellen Best, 1839
Self-portrait by Mary Ellen Best, 1839 (credit)

Additional image credits:
Askart

Designer Desire: W Heaton Cooper

Mosaic of W Heaton Cooper paintings and books | H is for Home

As mentioned in yesterday’s Price Points post, we’ve recently been holidaying in the glorious Lake District. One artist that immediately springs to mind when the Lake District is mentioned is W Heaton Cooper. So he’s our choice for this week’s Designer Desire feature. His paintings, predominantly in watercolour, capture the beauty and atmosphere of the landscape – the physical features, the subtle tones – and the ever-changing light.

Portrait of W Heaton Cooper and his familycredit

W Heaton Cooper (1903-1995) came from a family of artists – his father Alfred was very well regarded – and an obvious influence on his work. W Heaton Cooper’s style is more impressionistic – and we find it has more impact and drama. His son, Julian and granddaughter, Rebecca carry on the artistic tradition.

In 1937-8, W Heaton Cooper and his wife, Ophelia, built a home, studio and gallery in Grasmere; it is still owned & run by his family.

He has published a number of books containing his works including The Hills of Lakeland, The Tarns of Lakeland, Lakeland Portraits and his autobiography, Mountain Painter. All of which can be found on Amazon and Abe Books.

When we visit the Lakes, we often stay at a house owned by one of Justin’s relatives. It was built in the late 1960s/early 70s – and is relatively untouched from that time. It still has lots of teak fittings and the the original spiral staircase running from top to bottom through the three floors. We often imagine what we’d do with it décor wise if it was ours. It’s constructed of local slate, so has a Lakeland feel, but it’s not a ‘cutesy’ Lakeland cottage. We’d keep the original features and go mid-century modern in style with a comfortable, relaxed country rustic vibe. And, without doubt, we’d have a really huge W Heaton Cooper on one wall!

Original watercolours come up for sale at auction and reproduction prints can be found on eBay.

Additional image credits:

Babbington Fine Art | Pinterest