John Campbell Mitchell Explained

John Campbell Mitchell
Honorific Suffix:RSA
Birth Name:John Mitchell
Birth Date:1 December 1861
Birth Place:Campbeltown, Scotland
Death Place:Corstorphine Hill, Edinburgh, Scotland
Known For:Landscape painter
Style:Broad open views
Spouse:Mary Agnes Mitchell

John Campbell Mitchell ARSA (1861 – 15 February 1922) was a late 19th and early 20th century Scottish landscape artist. He specialised in broad open views such as moorland or beaches.

Life

He was born John Mitchell on Shore Street in Campbeltown in western Scotland on 1 December 1861 to John Mitchell (d.1896), a local grocer, and his wife, Janet McMillan (1836-1920). He adopted the name Campbell in later life, probably in reference to his place of birth. His maternal grandfather, Malcolm McMillan, owned the "Steamboat Inn" in Campbeltown. He attended Campbeltown Grammar School until around 1872.[1]

He was apprenticed as a lawyer to the local (and still extant) firm of C & D MacTaggart. However, the local artist William McTaggart actively encouraged him to pursue art, and in the summer of 1874 he joined The Trustees Academy in Edinburgh to retrain as an artist. He began exhibiting at the Royal Scottish Academy in 1886.[2]

In 1887 he went to Paris to study under Jean-Joseph Benjamin-Constant, returning to Edinburgh in 1890. He presumably lived with his father, who had retired to Edinburgh in 1889 and was living at 151 Bruntsfield Place, then a very new and exclusive flat, and exceptionally larger than the average property.[3]

In 1901 he spent several months in Galloway in south-west Scotland studying the ever-changing skies.[4] In 1903 he settled in Corstorphine in west Edinburgh, remaining there for the rest of his life.

He was elected ARSA in 1904 and full RSA in 1919.[5]

He died at home, Duncree on Clermiston Road[6] on Corstorphine Hill in western Edinburgh on 15 February 1922.[7]

John Campbell Mitchell is buried in the churchyard of Gogar Parish Church, Edinburgh

Known works

Family

He was married to Mary Agnes Mitchell.

His eldest son, Lt John Patrick Campbell Mitchell, was killed whilst serving in the Royal Flying Corps in the First World War on 21 April 1917 during the Second Battle of Arras. He was only 19. He is buried in Bruay Communal Cemetery Extension.[8]

Mitchell's younger son was the military scientist, Colin Campbell Mitchell.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Kintyre Magazine 68.
  2. Web site: - Artist Biography and Works for Sale.
  3. Edinburgh and Leith Post Office Directory 1890
  4. Dictionary of Scottish Art and Architecture, Peter McEwen
  5. Web site: John Campbell Mitchell (1862-1922) - Richard Taylor Fine Art.
  6. Edinburgh Post Office Directory 1910
  7. Scotsman (newspaper) 17 February 1922
  8. Web site: Search Results | CWGC.