Paul and Peter at Antioch (Signed) (Original)
Medium: Watercolour on Board
Size: 14" x 18" (350mm x 450mm)
Date: 1948
Signature: Signed by artist bottom left
Code: Coller9
This is the Signed unique original Watercolour painting by Henry Coller.
The two Disciples meet at Antioch.
An original watercolour painting 1948 for an illustrated edition of the Bible. Signed by the artist lower left.
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Deposit = £210 plus 5 payments of £208
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- Artist BiographyHenry Coller (21 December 1886 - 1958; London, UK)
Henry Coller was a commercial artist and illustrator whose fame rated just a few lines in a couple of post war art directories and also an entry in Who's Who in Art. My interest in him was aroused because among many other assignments Coller prepared the artwork for five series of cigarette cards issued between 1928 and 1934. These I will come back to a little later.
Born on 21 December 1886 in Wood Green, London, Henry was the son of the Rev W E Coller. It's a reasonable assumption that Henry shared his father's faith as his illustrative work in later years included a number of religious paintings. It is also a strong possibility that his father moved from London to Manchester as Henry was educated at Rusholme High School in that city before going on to study art at the Manchester School of Art.
In a series of articles that Coller wrote for The Artist magazine in 1936/37 under the heading 'My Approach and Methods in Story Illustration' he revealed a desire to be a commercial artist rather than risk the vagaries of trying to get established in 'fine art'. I quote: “I realized quite early that the readiest and most constant market was for line drawings for press advertising and so my later school of art years were spent in trying to master that most difficult tool, the pen. I concentrated, of course, on the pretty girl (the demand for that elusive being is always there) and I am still trying!”
Apart from that rather sensible early career decision Coller shows that he has a nice sense of humour. This is also apparent from a later statement regarding the type of work he was called upon to do. “For some years I was kept busy making line drawings to advertise every conceivable commodity – soaps, sports outfits, cigarettes, cough cures and baby foods – even a few 'Kodak' drawings, until those responsible for that advertising realized that the logical thing to do was to advertise cameras by means of photographs.”
Whilst Coller admits he was treated well by most of his clients it was apparent then, and I doubt that much has changed today, that not every employer was strictly ethical. Prewar poster designers were probably pre-eminent among commercial artists and commanded the highest fees but some advertisers were obviously keen to get their art on the 'cheap'. This is how Coller put it: “It is, however, a rather significant fact that although my drawings have been used quite a few times as posters, I have never yet been paid the price of a poster design.”
Nevertheless, Coller was good enough and industrious enough to be kept busy with a variety of assignments. His entry in Who's Who in Art (6th Edition) lists his specialties as, “sports sketches, drawings of sportsmen, men's fashions and other advertisements” and among his past work, “designs for Barney's Tobacco, Times Furnishing, Salute the Soldier (1943-44), Black & White Whisky (1950)”. The publications to which he contributed include Strand, Tatler, Windsor, Wide World, Passing Show, Pearsons, Sketch, Woman & Home, My Home, Women's Weekly, John Bull, Pictures That Teach and Home Journal.
Books that he illustrated include, Captain of Springdale by Dorita Fairlie Bruce (OUP), The Colour Book of Bible Stories by Joy Wheaton (Ward Lock), White Arab by Percy Westerman (Blackie) and, with others, Mrs Strang's Annual for Girls (OUP), The Wonder Book of Bible Stories, Moses in the Promised Land and The Life of Jesus, all by David Kyles (Ward Lock), and Picture Stories of the Old Testament by Mary Miller (Lutterworth).
The preponderance of religious books listed above, which probably date from the 1950s, suggest that Henry Coller managed to find a useful niche at a time when sketches for advertisements and magazine stories were starting to dry up. There are a number of religious paintings by Coller illustrated on the Look and Learn website which Steve feels may have been reprinted in Bible Story.
Henry Coller maintained a studio in London and gave an address at 38 Cleveland Square. A photo of him in his studio was published in The Artist magazine. Apart from his commercial work he found time to exhibit at the Royal Academy and also to paint portraits. One of these of Baron Pethick-Lawrence is in the collection of the National Portrait Gallery, London. He was a member of both the Chelsea Arts and London Sketch Clubs. He was married with four children and died in 1958.
(* A couple of additional notes: William Edward Coller was born in Trowbridge, Wiltshire, and was a schoolmaster in Blackburn, Lancashire, where the first two children of his children, Frederick Ernest W. (1876- ) and Ethel Jane (1880- ), were born. His wife, Jane (nee Watts, whom he had married in 1874), died in early 1880 at the age of 40, and W. E. Coller was married later that year to Elizabeth Anne Whitehead. Three further children followed, William Lonsdale (1882- ), born in Blackburn, and Edward (1884- ) and Henry, both born in Wood Green.
W. E. Coller continued to teach as a private tutor in English, Latin and French, but was also a Congregational Minister; in 1891 the family were living at Chorlton on Medlock, Manchester, in Lancashire; by 1901 they had moved to Moss Side, Manchester. Hence Henry Coller's attendance of a Manchester school.)
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