Maud Naftel Explained

Maud Naftel
Birth Date:1856
Death Date:1890
Death Place:Chelsea, London
Known For:Watercolour painting
Education:Slade School of Art
Occupation:Painter
Parents:Paul Jacob Naftel and Isabel Naftel
Nationality:British

Maud Naftel (1856–1890) was a British watercolourist.[1]

Life

Naftel was born in 1856, the daughter of Isabel Oakley and Paul Jacob Naftel who were both watercolour painters. She has been reported as an only child but it is thought that another artist named Isabel Naftel was her sister.[2] Maud was trained in painting by her father, at the Slade School of Fine Art and by Carolus-Duran in Paris.[3]

Naftel exhibited at the Dudley Art Gallery and with their Society.[3] She was considered to the "only true" flower painter as her parents, her sister and her two painting aunts had different or wider painting interests.[4] Her illustrated book "Flowers and How to Paint Them"[1] was published in 1886 and it became a standard work.[3] [2]

Naftel died in London in 1890 at her father's home in Chelsea. She was one of the first people to be cremated at Woking Crematorium. She had been a member of the Cremation Society of Great Britain.[3]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Women 2018 - Category: Women 2018 - Image: 25. Maud Naftel, 1856-1890. maasgallery.co.uk. 2019-01-03.
  2. Book: Christopher Wood. Antique Collectors' Club. 1978. The Dictionary of Victorian Painters. 0-902028-72-3. registration.
  3. Naftel, Paul Jacob (1817–1891), watercolour painter and art teacher Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. 2004. en. 10.1093/ref:odnb/19719. 2019-01-03.
  4. Book: Problem Pictures: Women and Men in Victorian Painting. 5 July 2017. Taylor & Francis. 978-1-351-55315-5. 40–.