Historical Painting Techniques, Materials, and Studio Practice

(Steven Felgate) #1

Figure 4. Lay figure: Child no. 98. Fitz­
william Museum, University of Cambridge.


Figure 3. Personal account book, 1881 -1894, MS 250-1993, 37-8. Fitzwilliam Museum, Uni­
versity of Cambridge.

of both fu ll- and child-size figures in the archive; their composition-stuffed
knitted textile over a wooden and metal frame with papier-mache and gesso
heads-helps to explain why they were so fr equently sent fo r repair and why
Roberson entered into disputes with artists over damage sustained in use (20).
Despite this, they were probably cheaper and more reliable than living models,
of which Roberson kept a register to assist customers (21).

The accounts also show the range of Roberson's customers from wealthy,
well-established painters to professional graphic artists, scene painters, and
others. Many amateur artists also held accounts with Roberson, including
several members of royalty, both in England and abroad. Roberson appears
to have been supplying the upper end of the market and although it did not
hold the royal warrant fo r Queen Victoria, Roberson supplied the Queen
with sketching materials during her reign and was granted the royal warrant
to Queen Alexandra in 1912 and to King Vittorio Emanuele III of Italy in


  1. In 1949, Gerald Kelly remembered in a letter to Roberson, "When I
    first started painting I could not afford to deal with what I was then told was
    the best firm in London, but as soon as I got a little money I got my things
    from you, and gradually I have bought more and more ... " (22).


Some artists had their materials specially made to their own recipes or to a
fo rmula supplied in the past which they particularly liked. Leighton asked fo r
his paints to be made "extra stiff," a preference alluded to in a letter from a
fellow artist in 1888: "I have used your colours fo r several years, and I can
with the greatest confidence say that they have given me every satisfaction.
There is one quality which is greatly esteemed-and this Sir Frederick Leigh­
ton says is a great desideratum, that is stiffness" (23).

Roberson, however, did not always think the customers' demands were ad­
visable. A notebook entry dated 27 November 1882 records, "Sir F. Leighton
P. R. A. in 1881, 82, had canvases prepared with different grounds made to
his order & warranted not to stand; plaster of Paris &c. with Lac Varnish over
&c. &c." (24). In June 1888, Millais is also recorded as having "canvases pre­
pared thickly with one coat of turpentine color to his order, also prepared
his own canvases. Not warranted to stand" (25).

Woodcock 33

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