Society portrait painter in both oils and watercolours
Notable work
Portraits of the Governor and Lady Hamilton, Duke of Norfolk, Edward VII, George V, Lord Kitchener of Khartoum
Spouse
Alice Mary Saintsbury (m. 1885; div. 1894)
Philip Tennyson Cole (30 May 1862 – 2 September 1939), generally known as Tennyson Cole, was an English society portrait painter in both oils and
watercolours, who first achieved fame in
Australasia and South Africa.[1]
Biography
Cole was born into a family of artists in London in 1862.[2] As a young boy, Cole received training in art from his father, who was himself a successful painter.[3] He may have been related to
George Vicat Cole.[4] He was educated at Chiswick College in Middlesex and had his first exhibition in London by age 20.[2]
Around the age of 19, he fell in love with Alice Mary Saintsbury, an actress, whom he married in 1885, supporting him financially.[5]
He sailed to
Tasmania, arriving in the Doric in 1889.[6] During the voyage he painted his female companion, a fine contralto who called herself Madame Cole, and several fellow passengers. After a year's stay in Hobart, having completed a good many commissions to general acclaim, including a fine pair of portraits of the Governor and Lady Hamilton, which were presented to the Art Gallery of Tasmania,[7] he moved to Melbourne. In October 1892, while visiting New Zealand, he was charged in
Auckland with deserting his wife in England some three years before.[8] He was ordered to pay his wife support of £1 per week.
He left Australia from
Adelaide aboard the Ormus in September 1893. His erstwhile wife died in Sydney on 7 April 1894.[9] In August 1895 the (yet to be inaugurated)
Perth Art Gallery was donated his portrait of Sir George Grey.[10] In May 1896 he was working in South Africa. In 1900 he was touring the African interior.[11] The following year he was back in England and the
Royal Academy had an exhibition which included his portrait of the Duke of Norfolk.[12] In 1902 commissions included Lord Milner and Cecil Rhodes. In 1908 he was granted a series of sittings by the King.[13] He spent part of the World War I years as a guest of an Indian Maharajah; he died in
Tooting Bec Hospital.[14]
^"Tasmanian Art Gallery". The Mercury. Hobart, Tasmania. 1 February 1890. p. 1 Supplement: The Mercury Supplement. Retrieved 25 October 2014 – via National Library of Australia.