Harold E. H. Nelson Explained

Harold Edward Hughes Nelson (22 May 1871 – 25 February 1948) was an artist, illustrator, designer of bookplates, advertisements and postage stamps, copper etcher and engraver, and lecturer. He signed his works with the initials N. or H.N.

Life

Nelson was born in Dorchester a town where Nelsons had lived since the 18th century, one of four children. He studied at both the Lambeth School of Art and the Central School of Arts and Design - at the latter under Luke Taylor.[1] He lived in London for most of his life - mainly in Lambeth and Clapham - then Brockenhurst (in Hampshire), and Carshalton (in SW London) between 1902 and 1906.

Nelson was strongly influenced by Albrecht Dürer and William Morris, and was prolific as a "black and white artist" specialising in medieval illustrations in a Pre-Raphaelite, Arts and Crafts and Art Nouveau style, often with elaborate ornamental borders.

Nelson's provided illustrations for a number of books (see below) and also magazines such as: The Studio,[2] The Graphic (1915), The Sphere, The Queen, Ladies Field, London Illustrated Weekly,[3] Magazine of Art (designed a calendar for 1901), Royal Academy Pictures (illustrated the cover, 1908), Old Colleges of Oxford, Aymer Vallance (illustrated the frontispiece, 1912), The Booklovers Magazine, The Bookplate, Cassells Magazine etc.

He is best known for his bookplates and heraldic designs, the first one appearing in 1897, inspired by Dürer. Commissioned by individuals and institutions, his designs were carefully matched to the name or character of the owner.[4] The Studio, in a review of 1900, wrote of his work, "…bright and spirited, while in beauty of drawing it would be hard to find their equals among modern book-plates."

Although Nelson trained in the traditions of William Morris, as a commercial artist he adapted his style to each new movement as it came along. In the 1920s and 1930s he worked in an Art Deco style, his most notable designs being the Wembley Lion with a 'setting sun' motif on the British Empire postage stamps of 1924 and 1925. However, his drawing of St George and the Dragon for the £1 stamp for the Postal Union Congress, 1929, harks back to his earlier style.[5]

Nelson illustrated several books including one authored by the Queen of Romania: A Real Queen's Fairy Tales under the pseudonym 'Carmen Sylva' (published in 1901). The illustrations were described in The Studio as "clever, powerful and beautiful".

His other commercial activities involved designing advertisements for Cadbury's, Pears Soap, Dewar's and Selfridges etc. He also produced artwork for numerous calendars.

Nelson was the Secretary of the Art Workers Guild[6] for a number of years and several examples of his work and a pencil portrait of Nelson by the artist Ester Borough Johnson (fl. 1896–1940) can still be seen at its headquarters in Queens Square, London. There, Nelson (and his wife Margaret) became friends with Charles Robert Ashbee, the designer, author and entrepreneur who was influential in the English Arts and Crafts movement. After Nelson's death, his wife Margaret took over the duties as secretary of the Guild. Nelson was also a member of the Society of Graphic Art (SGA).[7]

He died suddenly in 1948, aged 77, in Regent Street, London - leaving a widow and a daughter, Winifrede.[8]

Works

Harold Nelson illustrated the following works:

References

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Luke Taylor, RE, an excellent etcher, enlisted at the first opportunity during the First World War and was killed in action.
  2. The Studio, a monthly art magazine in London from 1893 well into the 1900s. See Art Nouveau (graphic-design.com)
  3. In 1920 he wrote an article for the London Illustrated Weekly on the origin and aims of the Society of Graphic Art.
  4. Thus, on Joan Phillip's bookplate we see Joan of Arc, on Gerald Knight's a knight in armour and on his work for St Andrew's, his local church in Carshalton, a Celtic design incorporating the Scottish saint.
  5. Nelson also submitted a stamp design for the 1935 Silver Jubilee of King George V, but it was rejected.
  6. http://www.artworkersguild.org/ Art Workers Guild
  7. http://www.sgfa.org.uk/About-the-Society/ Society of Graphic Art
    • Obituary in "The Times" - 28 February 1948.