Dorothy Carleton Smyth Explained

Dorothy Carleton Smyth (1880 – 16 February 1933) was a Scottish artist, a compatriot of Charles Rennie Mackintosh, active in theatrical and costuming design, and one of the leading lights at the Glasgow School of Art during the post WWI period. Her association with the Arts & Crafts Movement in England and Scotland, together with her work in fine book-binding, illustration, and faculty leadership at the GSA, place her at the hub of the Golden Age of Illustration. Named, in 1933, as GSA's first female director—by a unanimous vote of the School's governing board—her tragic early death by brain hemorrhage in that same year deprived Scotland of an accomplished, active and internationally respected proponent of Scottish art.

Dorothy Smyth
Birth Date:1880 3, df=yes
Birth Place:Cambuslang, Scotland
Movement:Arts and Crafts Movement
Golden Age of Illustration
Education:Manchester School of Art, 1892-1893
Glasgow School of Art, 1898-1902
Known For:Theatre, Costume Design
Death Place:Cambuslang, Scotland

Early life and family

Smyth was born in Cambuslang near Glasgow in 1880 to Elizabeth Ramage and a jute manufacturer, William Hugh Smyth;[1] her parents originated from France and Ireland, respectively.[2] Although the family moved to Manchester in the 1880s, Smyth returned to Glasgow to study, as did her sister, Olive (1882–1949), who also became an artist . A third sister, Rose, became a composer.[3]

Education: The Arts & Crafts Movement

Between 1885 and 1893 Smyth attended the Colonel Clark's School in Manchester and the Manchester High School for Girls.[4] She studied under Walter Crane at the Manchester School of Art between 1893 and 1897. Crane, an advocate of the Arts and Crafts Movement, espoused the practical application of the arts for books, clothing, and the use of artisanal craft in all aspects production.

Smyth's work for bookbinder Cedric Chivers during this period, a publisher of handcrafted editions of popular works such as The Poems of Alfred, Lord Tennyson and The Jungle Book by Rudyard Kipling, seems a natural extension of her work with Crane, impressively, Smyth was already such an accomplished illustrator that she was trusted not merely with interior design-work (as in her illustrations to Chivers's Jungle Book edition) but also with designs for the elaborately hand-colored covers of these luxorious "vellucent" hand crafted books.[5]

The Arts and Crafts Movement was additionally an advocate for developing a sense of place; it is therefore not surprising that, following these first years of training, Smyth,, chose, at the age of 18, to return to Scotland and her early home, to continue her studies at the Glasgow School of Art (GSA).

By the time she had begun her study at Glasgow (1898), Smyth's interest had become focused on theatre and costume design, "her fascination with exotic clothes" leading her to active participation in the many student-produced plays and masques within the school.[6]

Career

Smyth's work, with its elegant, art nouveau aesthetic, stood out from her student days. Her stained glass window Tristan and Iseult was selected for exhibition at the Glasgow International Exhibition (1901), even before she had received her diploma. Following her graduation from GSA (1902), an anonymous female patron paid for her membership in the Glasgow Society of Lady Artists and financed her travel to Florence, Paris, and Switzerland to "study the European masters". In 1903, she was commissioned by Craibe Angus to exhibit in Turin, Cork, Toronto and Budapest. Later that same year, through the GSLA, Smyth would meet F.R. Benson, a theatrical producer who hired Smyth for his touring company. She would spend the next decade traveling and producing costume-work.

Touring with the Theatre Companies, 1904-1914

Smyth's work for Benson including the costumes for a number of Shakespearean festivals in Stratford, for Benson and other theatrical companies, as well as work for pageants, festivals, and the "tableaux" that remained popular during this period.

Alongside this travel, Smyth retained her Glaswegian connections. In 1912, she was in Glasgow, organizing the committee for a holiday "pageant tableau," working for the Glasgow Repertory Company, and the Quinlan Opera Company. With her sister, Olive, and several other female artists from Glasgow, Smyth helped found the Sister Studios which offered classes in a variety of disciplines including metalwork, embroidery and ceramic decoration. This work gave Smyth detailed managerial experience that would serve her well on her permanent return to Glasgow to take up a teaching post at her old school.

Teaching and Work in Illustration

In 1914, she returned to GSA to teach, simultaneously continuing her work as a professional artist creating "book illustrations, sculptures, silverwork and portraits" for commercial businesses and private individuals.

Leadership Appointments at the GSA

In 1927, Smyth was appointed head of the Commercial Art Department (1927), where she remained until 1933.

In early 1933, Smyth was offered the full Directorship of GSA, "perhaps the first women to be offered such a post within a higher education institution." Smyth accepted, however, she died little more than a month later, from a massive brain hemorrhage.[7]

Legacy

Smyth lived with her sisters for much of her life.[8] Olive Smyth was also at GSA during this period, teaching fashion.

In 1921, aged 41, she painted Self Portrait. This piece shows her in her studio with brushes, canvas and paint palette, and smiling at the onlooker. Olive Carleton Smyth presented the painting to Glasgow Museums in 1948.

Following Smyth's untimely death on February 16, 1933, in her Cambuslang home, W.O. Hutchinson took up GSA Directorship. Considering "the glowing reports regarding her work and teaching. We can only wonder what the School would have been like now if it had had its first female director in 1933!"

Olive took up the position of Head of Design at GSA.

She was highly praised and supported by Fra Newbury. Her circle has posthumously been described as the 'Glasgow Girls' group of artists.[9]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: 'Glasgow Girls' Women in Art and Design 1880-1920. Canongate. Burkhauser. Jude.
  2. Book: GRAY, SARA.. BRITISH WOMEN ARTISTS : a biographical dictionary of 1,000 women artists in the british... decorative arts.. 2019. DARK RIVER. 978-1911121633. [S.l.]. 1085975377.
  3. Book: Cumming. Elizabeth. Hand, heart and soul : the arts and crafts movement in Scotland. 2007. Birlinn. Edinburgh. 9781841586106. 60. Dorothy...who had also worked for Chivers, and her sister Olive (1882-1949) led classes in sgraffito and gesso plaster working..
  4. Web site: Smyth, Dorothy Carleton (1880-1933) GSA Archives. www.gsaarchives.net. 2016-01-23. 6 May 2018. https://web.archive.org/web/20180506154957/http://www.gsaarchives.net/archon/index.php?p=creators/creator&id=547. dead.
  5. Book: Fell, H. Granville . https://books.google.com/books?id=EY10kgN9YJAC&dq=cedric+Chivers+++Dorothy+Smyth+cover&pg=PA174 . The Studio: An Illustrated Magazine of Fine & Applied Art . 1903 . The Studio . 169–176 . en . Vellucent Book-Bindings: A new method of decoration for bound books--the "Vellucent" process.
  6. Web site: 2015-08-19 . Dorothy Carleton Smyth - "a living force contained in a human body" . 2022-04-17 . GSA Archives & Collections . en-GB.
  7. Web site: The Glasgow Herald . 16 Feb 1933 . Glasgow Art Teacher - Death of Miss D. Carleton Smyth . 2022-04-22 . Glasgow's Cultural History . 6 . en.
  8. Book: Strang . Alice . Modern Scottish Women: Painters and Sculptors 1885-1965 . 2015 . Trustees of the National Galleries of Scotland . 9781906270896.
  9. Book: Elizabeth Ewan . The Biographical Dictionary of Scottish Women: From the Earliest Times to 2004 . Sue Innes . Sian Reynolds . Edinburgh University Press . 2006 . 978-0-7486-1713-5 . 136–7.
  10. Web site: Smyth . Dorothy Carleton . 1910 . Tabbard, Dagger, Purse . 2022-04-17 . Victoria and Albert Museum .