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Frederick Charles Cooper

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Frederick Charles Cooper
BornBetween 1810 and 1821
Nottingham, England, British Empire
DiedBetween 1880 and 1883
London, England, British Empire
NationalityBritish
EducationRoyal Academy of Arts
Known forPainting, drawing
StylePortrait, still life, genre
MovementRealism, mysticism

Frederick Charles Cooper (between 1810 and 1821, Nottingham, England, British Empire – between 1880 and 1883, London, England, British Empire).[1][2][3] was a British artist, traveler and anthropologist of the Victorian era. Cooper accompanied Sir Austen Henry Layard on his expedition to the territory of ancient Assyria in 1849-1850. During this trip, he created a series of detailed watercolors and sketches that captured the ruins and artifacts of Nineveh, the surrounding landscapes of northern Iraq and Syria, as well as anthropological observations and portraits of the artist's contemporaries and expedition participants.

Cooper was also a honorary Consul to Queen Victoria in Mesopotamia and Kurdistan (1850–1855).[4]

Early life and artistic beginnings

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Frederick Charles Cooper was born in Nottingham. At the age of about 25, he moved to London with hopes of establishing himself as an artist. In 1844, while already residing permanently in the capital of England, at 37 Dorset Square, he reached the first important milestone in his career by exhibiting the work Ophelia: therewith fantastic garlands did she make at the Royal Academy's annual exhibition.[5]

The Assyrian expedition

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In 1849, Cooper was selected as the official artist for an historically ambitious expedition led by Austen Henry Layard, an archaeologist and diplomat. The expedition set out for areas that are now in northern Iraq and Syria, with the aim of excavating Nineveh - the ancient capital of Assyria, famous for its architecture and associations with biblical and other religious texts.

The Trustees of the British Museum, recognizing the importance of visually documenting these archaeological wonders, decided to appoint Cooper as the official illustrator of the expedition. His task was to meticulously sketch and paint in watercolor the artifacts, structures, and landscapes that were being uncovered and discovered during the research. Layard himself acknowledged Cooper's role, writing in his 1853 book Discoveries among the Ruins of Nineveh and Babylon[6] that the "assistance of a competent artist was most desirable, to portray with fidelity those monuments which injury and decay had rendered unfit for removal." Cooper's artistic ability became crucial in preserving a visual record of the discoveries, particularly given the fragile and deteriorating state of many of the relics.

Sources claim an uneasy relationship between Cooper and Layard, and personal dislike that Layard had for Cooper. John Curtis, the Keeper of the Middle East Department at the British Museum (1989-2011), wrote:

From the start, it was clear that Layard was fairly contemptuous of Cooper and had little time for him. Cooper was very homesick, missed his wife, and even painted a portrait of her from memory which he took out from to time to gaze at. He didn't like the food, and suffered from the climate as it started to get hotter.[3]: 70 

The expedition to Nineveh culminated in one of the most important archaeological discoveries of the 19th century—the excavation of the palace of Sennacherib. Among Cooper's numerous works as the expedition's artist were depictions of Assyrian reliefs and monumental sculptures, including an image of the famous winged bulls guarding the entrance to the palace; a work depicting two lions at the entrance to the sanctuary of Ninurta; Nimrud. One particularly impressive image shows a giant figure being carefully lowered onto a wooden cart using ropes - a scene that conveys the scale and drama of the research.

More than fifty of Cooper's original drawings from this expedition are now part of the British Museum's collection.[7]

Return to London and exhibitions

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Upon his return to London in 1851, Cooper presented the public a visual report of the journey of 37 paintings arranged as a diorama at Gothic Hall on Lower Grosvenor Street. The diorama was a sensation, immersing viewers in the world of ancient Assyria and transporting them to the very sites of Layard's discoveries.[8] This exhibition placed Cooper at the center of Victorian England's fascination with the ancient Near East and its connections to the mysticism.

Cooper continued to exhibit at the Royal Academy, where he showed works that highlighted his experiences in Mesopotamia. His 1852 painting Scene from the Excavations of Nineveh was drawn directly from his on-site sketches, as was his 1860 work The Plains of Nineveh from the Tanner's Ferry near Mosul.

The art historian H.L. Mallalieu wrote in his Dictionary of British Watercolour Artists up to 1920: "Cooper's landscapes are effective, but his figures can be rather shaky..."[9]

Despite his success, Cooper remained a somewhat elusive figure in the art world. In the 1860s, one of the artist's best works, "The Girl and the Alchemist" (1860), was presented at the Royal Academy, in which his traditional realism is replaced by mysticism, which by that time had become an integral part of Victorian England's culture. He exhibited his final piece, The Souvenir, at the Royal Academy in 1868, marking the slow end of his public artistic career.

Later years and death

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Cooper's later life is basically unknown. Information about him after 1870 is almost entirely absent from available sources. He is believed to have died around 1880.

In addition to the British Museum, the artist's works are also featured in several galleries and private collections[10][11]

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References

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  1. ^ "Frederick Charles Cooper". Royal Academy of Arts. Retrieved 2024-09-16.
  2. ^ "Excavation of the City of Nineveh | The Orientalist Sale including Works from the Najd Collection | 2021". Sotheby's. Retrieved 2024-09-16.
  3. ^ a b Curtis, John (2020). "Layard's relationship with F. C. Cooper and his other artists". In Ermidoro, Stefania; Riva, Cecilia (eds.). Rethinking Layard 1817–2017 (PDF). Venice: Istituto Veneto di Scienze, Lettere ed Arti. ISBN 978-88-92990-00-5.
  4. ^ "Frederick Charles Cooper, KURDISH TENTS OF SHINGAL (Sinjar)". www.saradistribution.com. Retrieved 2024-09-16.
  5. ^ Graves, Algernon (1905). The Royal Academy of Arts: a complete dictionary of contributors and their work from its foundation in 1769 to 1904 (1st ed.). London: Henry Graves & Co. and George Bell and Sons. p. 146.
  6. ^ Layard, Austen H. "Discoveries among the Ruins of Nineveh and Babylon".
  7. ^ a b "Frederick Charles Cooper in British Museum". British Museum.. (See "Related objects".)
  8. ^ Shoberl, William (1851). Diorama of Nineveh: Painted by Frederick Charles Cooper, Esq. the Artist Sent Out by the Trustees of the British Museum to Assist Dr. Layard in His Researches. London, British Empire: William Shoberl.
  9. ^ Mallalieu, Huon (1986). The dictionary of British watercolour artists up to 1920. Woodbridge, Suffolk: Antique Collectors' Club. ISBN 978-1-85149-036-3 – via Internet Archive.
  10. ^ Caroline, Juler (1991). Najd: Collection of Orientalist Paintings (19th Century European Orientalist Paintings). Mathaf Gallery, London, England: Manara. ASIN B002F90PPO.
  11. ^ "Frederick Charles Cooper on Artnet".