William Duke (artist) explained

William Charles Duke
Birth Date:1815
Birth Place:Cork, Ireland
Death Date:17 October 1853
Death Place:Collingwood, Victoria
Nationality:Irish-Australian
Spouse:Lucy
Field:Portraiture, Landscapes

William Charles Duke (1814  - 17 October 1853) was an Irish-born Australian artist remembered primarily for his portraits of several Māori leaders, and as a "journeyman painter of lively marine oil paintings of whaling, commissioned by Hobart shipowners".[1]

Biography

William Charles Duke was born in Cork, to Catherine, wife of carpenter Charles Duke. He was baptised on 16 July 1815 in St Anne, Shannon,[2] and followed his father into carpentry.

Duke married dressmaker Lucy on 16 February 1840,[3] and together they undertook assisted migration to Australia, arriving in Sydney with their son Charles, born on the voyage, aboard the Lady McNaughton on 16 December 1840; Charles died in Sydney on 2 December 1841, aged 1 year.[4]

Duke worked as a scene-painter and mechanist at Sydney’s Royal Victoria Theatre until 1844, when he spent several months in New Zealand.[5] When he returned to Australia it was to Hobart, where he landed on 7 May 1845 aboard the Sir John Franklin. Lucy and their now two children joined him from Sydney in September, by which time he was established as a scene-painter at the Hobart Town Royal Victoria Theatre in Campbell Street.

In Tasmania, Duke first began to work as a portrait painter; his earliest painting is a portrait believed to be of Mrs Wilkinson, née Eldridge, signed and dated October 1845. Hobart was a major whaling port and he produced a series paintings of whaling ships and whaling scenes. In 1846, Duke produced some of the earliest painted depictions of individual Māori when he finished two small portraits apparently begun in New Zealand, and undertook a larger-scale portrait of one of the Māori men transported for imprisonment in Tasmania's Maria Island in November 1846,[6] during the early New Zealand wars.

Commercial work

Duke worked with mechanist Richard Johnson on two moving, circular cityscape dioramas (views of Constantinople, Florence, Jerusalem and Venice) [7] which were exhibited in Sydney and Hobart in 1847 to paying audiences. At the same time, he came to local notoriety with the publication of four paintings of local whaling operations, and began to take commissions to produce paintings of ships to be used in advertising.

In 1852, Duke followed the lure of the Victorian gold rush, relocating with his growing family to country Victoria, where he continued portrait painting and theatre work.

Duke's last commission was for Joseph Andrew Rowe, an American circus owner who spent two years touring in and around Melbourne from 1852. Rowe had commissioned paintings and decorations from Duke for his American Circus and Duke was into his fourth week of work when he became ill and went home. Duke's condition deteriorated and he died a week later, leaving his wife and children destitute. The generous Mr Rowe initiated a 'subscription-paper' contributing ten pound to the fund. During the course of one day at the Circus, his fund raised a respectable sum of money for the widow and her children.[8]

Duke died of what was recorded as inflammation of the lungs in Collingwood, Victoria at the age of 38, leaving Lucy and six children.[9]

Works

Notes and References

  1. Lindsay Broughton, The Companion to Tasmanian History (online at the University of Tasmania)
  2. Design and Art Australia Online, biographical entry, originally from The Dictionary of Australian Artists: painters, sketchers, photographers and engravers to 1870
  3. Caroline Von Oppeln, artist biography, Design and Art Australia Online, updated 2011
  4. Registry of Births, Deaths and Marriages, NSW
  5. Gallery secures Duke portrait, Helen Musa, CityNews.com.au, 6 March 2012
  6. Maori times, Maori places: prophetic histories, Karen Sinclair, page 182
  7. The Courier, 23 August 1847
  8. Hobart Town Courier, 26 October 1853
  9. Registry of Births, Deaths and Marriages, Victoria
  10. Web site: Home . daao.org.au.