 |
COATES, GEORGE JAMES (1869-1930), artist,
|
was born at North Melbourne on 8 August 1869. His father, John Coates, was an
artist-lithographer of English stock, his mother was the daughter of Ephraim
Irwin who came from Ireland. He was educated at St lames Grammar School, and at
the age of 15 was apprenticed to a firm of glass-stainers, Messrs Fergusson and
Urie. He attended the North Melbourne school of design and then joined the
evening classes at the national gallery, Melbourne. He could not, however,
attend continuously. His father had died when he was eight years old and the boy
was sometimes unable to afford the comparatively trifling fees. Though not tall
he was beautifully formed, an excellent swimmer and a first-rate amateur boxer.
Lionel Lindsay tells the story of how a trainer had suggested that he should
give up art and take up a "man's work".
At the national gallery classes he won first prizes for drawing and for
painting from the nude, and before the conclusion of his course opened a life
class. Among the students associated with him were the Lindsay brothers, Max
Meldrum and George Bell, all destined to become well-known as artists. In 1896
he won the Melbourne national gallery travelling scholarship, and in 1897 went
to Europe as did also a fellow competitor, Miss Dora Meeson, whom he was
afterwards to marry. Coates entered Julien's classes and always felt that he had
been fortunate in spending his student days in Paris at such a good period of
French art, while Puvis de Chavannes, Monet, Renoir, Degas and Jean-Paul Laurens
were still living. He met Miss Meeson again in Paris and they became engaged,
but as his only income came from his scholarship their marriage had to be
postponed. In 1900 Coates left Paris and took a studio in London. He obtained
employment in supplying drawings for the Historian's History of the
World, but after that ceased there was great difficulty in selling black and
white work and portrait commissions were scarce. However, on 23 July 1903 Coates
and Miss Meeson were married, her father having agreed to make the young couple
an allowance of £100 a year. Augustus John owned a studio which he let to them
at £50 a year, and a long struggle to obtain recognition followed. An early
success was a portrait of Miss Jessica Strubelle, which gained an honourable
mention at the salon of 1910 and is now in the Bendigo gallery; but Coates did
not really come into notice until the 1912 Royal Academy exhibition where he had
three important canvases hung, "Arthur Walker and his brother Harold", now at
Melbourne, Christine Silver", and "Mother and Child" now in the Adelaide
gallery. The success of these pictures led to some commissions and the financial
position became easier. The exhibition of the painting of the Walker brothers in
1913 at the Société Nationale des Beaux Arts led to his being elected an
associate of that society, and full membership followed some years later. In
1913 Mrs Coates brought some of their pictures to Australia which were exhibited
in Melbourne and Adelaide. However, Coates fell ill, and his wife had to abandon
a proposed exhibition of his work at Sydney and returned with him to Europe
where a holiday in Italy soon restored his health.
When the war came Coates joined the Territorial R.A.M.C. and worked as a ward
orderly. He was promoted to be a sergeant and given charge of the recreation
room. In April 1919 he became an official war artist to the Australian
government, and made several paintings of war scenes. But he had felt the strain
of the war very much, and in April 1919 was officially discharged as "no longer
physically fit for war service". He, however, was able to go on with his
paintings of war subjects. In 1921 he revisited Australia, exhibitions were held
at the principal cities, and several pictures were sold. Returning to England in
1922 busy years of painting followed, but his health was often not good. He died
suddenly on 27 July 1930.
Coates was a modest, sympathetic man who often spared time to give criticism
and help to struggling artists. His modesty tended to delay the full
appreciation of his powers as an artist, and he was quite incapable of pushing
himself or his work. Primarily a portrait painter, when opportunity offered he
could manage a subject painting with great ability showing beautiful feeling for
rhythm and composition. His painting was usually low toned without losing
luminosity, and the drawing was always excellent. He is represented in the
Sydney, Melbourne, Adelaide, Brisbane, Perth, Bendigo, Ballarat, Geelong and
Castlemaine art galleries, and at the Australian war museum, Canberra. Some
examples of his work are also in English galleries and at the Canadian war
museum. He was survived by his wife Dora Meeson Coates, a capable artist, who is
also represented in Australian galleries. How much his wife meant to Coates may
be gathered from the statement made by a friend that "he was utterly unhappy
separated from her".
|