Martin Hardie (artist): Difference between revisions

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His three-volume history of ”Watercolour Painting in Britain”, published posthumously in the 1960s, is recognised as the standard work on the subject.

His three-volume history of ”Watercolour Painting in Britain”, published posthumously in the 1960s, is recognised as the standard work on the subject.

Born in London, Hardie was an expert on [[watercolour]]s, and painted many himself. He was a member of the [[Royal Watercolour Society]]. He married Agnes Pattisson in 1903, and from the 1930s onwards lived in [[Tonbridge]].<ref name=”Tonbridge M Hardie”>{{cite web |title=Martin Hardie |url=http://www.tonbridgehistory.org.uk/people/martin-hardie.htm#books |website=www.tonbridgehistory.org.uk |publisher=Tonbridge Historical Society}}</ref>

Born in London, Hardie was an expert on [[watercolour]]s, and painted many himself. He was a member of the [[Royal Watercolour Society]]. He married Agnes Pattisson in 1903, and from the 1930s onwards lived in [[Tonbridge]].<ref name=”Tonbridge M Hardie”>{{cite web |title=Martin Hardie |url=http://www.tonbridgehistory.org.uk/people/martin-hardie.htm#books |website=www.tonbridgehistory.org.uk |publisher=Tonbridge Historical Society}}</ref>

[[File:ABDAG002693 – Martin Hardie – Wells-on-Sea.jpeg|thumb|[[Wells-next-the-Sea]], watercolour, c. 1946]]

[[File:ABDAG002693 – Martin Hardie – Wells-on-Sea.jpeg|thumb|[[Wells-next-the-Sea]], watercolour, c. 1946]]


Revision as of 21:05, 25 October 2025

English art historian

Captain Martin Hardie, the artist, sketching in Italy.

Martin Hardie (1875-1952) was a painter in watercolour, printmaker, art historian and museum curator.[1]

His three-volume history of Watercolour Painting in Britain, published posthumously in the 1960s, is recognised as the standard work on the subject.

Born in London, Hardie was an expert on watercolours, and painted many himself. He was a member of the Royal Watercolour Society. He married Agnes Pattisson in 1903, and from the 1930s onwards lived in Tonbridge.[2] He was an army captain during World War I.

Wells-next-the-Sea, watercolour, c. 1946

His uncle was the Scottish painter Charles Martin Hardie (1858-1916).[3] After Saint Paul’s School, London, he read Classics at Trinity College, Cambridge, and then attended classes at the Royal College of Art while working at the V&A. After several years as the second in charge, in 1921 Hardie was appointed Keeper of the Department of Prints and Drawings at the Victoria & Albert Museum,[4] a position he kept until his retirement in 1935.[1] James Laver, who worked under him and wrote the catalogue of his prints, described him as ‘the most considerate of chiefs, the most helpful of guides, the most delightful of friends’ and said of his art ‘his is a refined and delicate talent founded upon good draftsmanship and an exquisite sense of atmosphere’.[2]

Duhen’s Pig Farm, etching, 1908, 20.2 cm (7.9 in); width: 15 cm (5.9 in), edition of 50+3.[5]

His watercolours are typically fairly small and of English landscapes, or buildings in landscapes. His prints, in etching and sometimes drypoint, more often show small, untidy buildings, typical subjects from the British Etching Revival. Over 300 works are in British museums, especially the Victoria & Albert Museum, to which he and later his widow made substantial donations.[1] In July 1925 he exhibited 6 works in the Fifth Annual Exhibition of the Australian Painter-Etchers’ Society, held at Art Gallery, Education Department, Sydney, NSW.[6]

Published writing

  • Watercolour Painting in Britain, posthumously published in 3 volumes between 1966 and 1968.[2]
Volume I: The Eighteenth Century (1966), London: B. T. Batsford
Volume II: The Romantic Period (1967), London: B. T. Batsford
Volume III: The Victorians (1968), London: B. T. Batsford
  • Engraving and etching – a handbook for the use of students and print collectors (1906), Hardie’s translation of a German work
  • George Morland; a biographical essay, 1906
  • John Pettie, R.A., H.R.S.A., 1908

References

Artworks by or after Martin Hardie at the Art UK site

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