John Lucas Tupper John Lucas Tupper. ( 1826?1879) I. The Subject in Art (No. 1) A Sketch from Nature. III. The Subject in Art (No. II) The Papers of "The M.S. Society " No. I. IV. Viola and Olivia. The Papers of "The http://jefferson.village.virginia.edu/courses/ennc986/class/bios/tupper.html
Extractions: Papers of "The M.S. Society," No. V. Rain John Tupper was born in or around the year 1823 into a family of printers and stationers. His father, George Frederic Tupper, who was trained as a lithographic draftsman, owned his own firm, in which his two older sons, George and Alexander, also worked. Tupper's brother's undertook the first printing of The Germ and, subsequently, its publication (largely, one suspects, to provide their brother with a means of publishing his writings.) Tupper's "Extracts from the Diary of an Artist," which he published in The Crayon , provides virtually all we know of his early years. He adored Keats and Browning from an early age, and believed that "the painters before Raffaelle's time were better, i.e. more Christian, than Raffaelle himself; and that [Raphael] introduced the heathen element into modern art." Tupper began to study at the British Museum on 8 December 1836, in hopes of gaining admittance into the Royal Academy to study sculpture. On 18 December 1840, he was admitted into the Academy, where he met Hunt, Stephens, Collinson, Woolner, and D. G. Rossetti. After leaving the Academy, he was employed as an anatomical designer at Guy's Hospital, where William Michael Rossetti made his acquaintance. Supporting himself with his work at the hospital between 1849 and 1863, Tupper attempted a career as a sculptor. He showed eleven portrait medallions at the annual Royal Academy Exhibitions between 1854 and 1868, and received a commission for his most important sculpture, the "Linnaeus," in 1856. In 1863 Tupper left Guy's Hospital to become a drawing teacher at the University of London, and from 1865 to his death, he served as drawing master at Rugby. While at Rugby he wrote
John Lucas Tupper John Lucas Tupper. (1826?1879) John Lucas was the brother of Georgeand Alexander Tupper, managers of the firm that printed The Germ. http://www.iath.virginia.edu/courses/ennc986/class/bios/tupper.html
Extractions: Papers of "The M.S. Society," No. V. Rain John Tupper was born in or around the year 1823 into a family of printers and stationers. His father, George Frederic Tupper, who was trained as a lithographic draftsman, owned his own firm, in which his two older sons, George and Alexander, also worked. Tupper's brother's undertook the first printing of The Germ and, subsequently, its publication (largely, one suspects, to provide their brother with a means of publishing his writings.) Tupper's "Extracts from the Diary of an Artist," which he published in The Crayon , provides virtually all we know of his early years. He adored Keats and Browning from an early age, and believed that "the painters before Raffaelle's time were better, i.e. more Christian, than Raffaelle himself; and that [Raphael] introduced the heathen element into modern art." Tupper began to study at the British Museum on 8 December 1836, in hopes of gaining admittance into the Royal Academy to study sculpture. On 18 December 1840, he was admitted into the Academy, where he met Hunt, Stephens, Collinson, Woolner, and D. G. Rossetti. After leaving the Academy, he was employed as an anatomical designer at Guy's Hospital, where William Michael Rossetti made his acquaintance. Supporting himself with his work at the hospital between 1849 and 1863, Tupper attempted a career as a sculptor. He showed eleven portrait medallions at the annual Royal Academy Exhibitions between 1854 and 1868, and received a commission for his most important sculpture, the "Linnaeus," in 1856. In 1863 Tupper left Guy's Hospital to become a drawing teacher at the University of London, and from 1865 to his death, he served as drawing master at Rugby. While at Rugby he wrote
Extractions: ed-u.com - Your Start Page for Education! Mystery Shoppers Needed Now... Get paid to shop and eat for free! Find out how to join our hugely popular Mystery Shopping Club (now over 8 years old!). Please enter (and check) your e-mail address in the box below and press submit (Sorry, UK, US and Canada only): Search ed-u.com Choose a page below... Education Resources: Web Search Education Resources Active Online Pupil Forums Bands ... Canada Special Features: Essays - Full Writing Course What is Bullying? Stress in Teaching Drugs Guest Contributors: The best Dad? You're an Idiot! Slave Caster of Freedom Out of the mouths of babes ... Ritalin - Straight-jacketing? Webmasters' Education: Start here - Why me? Slow pages equal more traffic ed-u.com's full list of pages o Find People by Name - Reverse Phone Search o Smart Pages - Child Care - Schools - Education - Autos - Business Services - Computers - Community Resources - Electronics - Entertainment - Family - Industrial - Personal Finance - Toys - Travel - Wedding Guide - Virtual Flowers - Virtual Cards - Quick Gift Tips - Gourmet Gifts - Books and Music Guide o Find Businesses - Accountants - CPA - Air Conditioning - Airline Companies - Apartments - Attorneys - Auto Dealers - New - Auto Dealers - Used - Auto Repair - Bail Bonds - Bakeries - Banks - Books - New - Carpet/Rug Cleaners - Chiropractors - Churches - Cleaners - Computers - Dentists - Electric Contractors - Employment Agencies - Florists - Furniture Retailers
Extractions: [This article originally appeared in The Journal of Pre-Raphaelite Studies John Lucas Tupper ( - 1879), who was an early member of the Pre-Raphaelite circle and who remained close to several original members of the Brotherhood until his death, today has been almost entirely forgotten. When William Michael Rossetti edited a posthumous volume of his friend's poems in 1897, he furnished a brief biographical sketch; and more recently Oswald Doughty wrote "A Minor Pre-Raphaelite: John Lucas Tupper" ( English Miscellany 11 [1960]: 175-210). Doughty, who did not have the advantage, possessed by more recent scholars, of consulting the Hunt/Tupper letters in the Huntington Library and the Hunt/Stephens letters in the Bodleian Library, mistakenly believed that Dante Gabriel Rossetti was Tupper's closest friend in the group. In fact, he was far more friendly with these other two members of the PRB. These biographical notices, mentions of Tupper by editors of recent editions of The Germ , and a few passing references elsewhere are all that is easily available about this interesting minor figure.
WebGuest Directory - Biography : T Trang, Thuy. Tranter, john. Trautman, Michael Lane. Travis. Travolta, john Tunney, Robin. tupper, john lucas. tupper, Sir Charles. Turco, Marty http://directory.webguest.com/Reference/Biography/T
Henry Hugh Armstead By J. L. Tupper Henry Hugh Armstead. john lucas tupper john lucas tupper. john lucas tupper, a minor PreRaphaelite sculptor, poet, theorist of art education Stephens, Tom Taylor, and john L. tupper. London http://www.victorianweb.org/sculpture/armstead/bio1.html
Extractions: John Lucas Tupper , a minor Pre-Raphaelite sculptor, poet, theorist of art education, and Rugby drawing master, wrote this contemporary appreciation of Armstead's career, which contains a detailed discussion of the Albert Memorial sculptures. The essay first appeared in The Portfolio and was scanned from the reprinted book version: English Artists of the Present Day. Essays by J. Beavington Atkinson, Sidney Colvin, F. G. Stephens, Tom Taylor, and John L. Tupper . London: Seeley, Jackson, and Halliday, 1872, 61-66. Following the house style of the Victorian Web , titles of works appear in bold font rather than between single quotes. I have also added more paragraphing to Tupper's text. [ GPL As sculptor, metalworker, and draughtsman, Mr. Armstead has an imposing claim upon criticism; the transcendent importance, however, of his labours in marble, for thc Albert AIemorial, will demand more than such a cursory notice as we must perforce take of less important, though characteristic works. Amongst the carliest of these were Boadicea , in alto-rilievo, and the so-called Satan dismayed , both executed in bronze by the Art Union of London. Meanwhile, and following these, there appeared a multitude of works in silver, all more or less characterised by a vigour and chastity of design, together with a sense of
Extractions: [This article originally appeared in The Journal of Pre-Raphaelite Studies John Lucas Tupper ( - 1879), who was an early member of the Pre-Raphaelite circle and who remained close to several original members of the Brotherhood until his death, today has been almost entirely forgotten. When William Michael Rossetti edited a posthumous volume of his friend's poems in 1897, he furnished a brief biographical sketch; and more recently Oswald Doughty wrote "A Minor Pre-Raphaelite: John Lucas Tupper" ( English Miscellany 11 [1960]: 175-210). Doughty, who did not have the advantage, possessed by more recent scholars, of consulting the Hunt/Tupper letters in the Huntington Library and the Hunt/Stephens letters in the Bodleian Library, mistakenly believed that Dante Gabriel Rossetti was Tupper's closest friend in the group. In fact, he was far more friendly with these other two members of the PRB. These biographical notices, mentions of Tupper by editors of recent editions of The Germ , and a few passing references elsewhere are all that is easily available about this interesting minor figure.
When Was Tupper Born? William Michael Rossetti states that he was born in London in or about 1826 inthe Prefatory Notice to Poems by the Late john lucas tupper (London Longmans http://65.107.211.206/art/birthdate.html
Extractions: The year of Tupper's birth is not certain. Although William Michael Rossetti states that he "was born in London in or about 1826" in the "Prefatory Notice" to Poems by the Late John Lucas Tupper (London: Longmans, 1897), p. viil, Tupper himself tells Hunt in a letter of October 1863 that he is forty years old, and the extracts from his diary published in The Crayon (see bibliographical item No. 7 below) suggest he was born in 1822! To complicate matters further, public records indicate that Tupper was born in 1824. My former student Ms. Sushma Kapoor informs me that, on checking the 1851 census forms, she "found an entry for the family showing J.L.T. age 27, born at Stamford Hill, Middlesex." Since Stamford Hill lies close to the boundaries of three parishes, their registers will have to be searched before one can hope to resolve this problem of his year of birth.
WWW: Lucas All about lucas www from BigTome.com History Artists C Cranach the Younger, lucas. john lucas tupper Writings. Artist's biography and a list of art/tupperbibl.html Arts Art History Artists T tupper, john lucas http://www.bigtome.com/big/page/Lucas
Tupper, John Lucas tupper, john lucas. JasperGifts.com. Links Arts Art History Artists T tupper,john lucas. Home Arts Art History Artists T tupper, john lucas. http://www.jaspergifts.com/Arts/Art_History/Artists/T/Tupper__John_Lucas/
T Tunney, Robin. tupper, john lucas. tupper, Sir Charles Tunney, RobinMovies. tupper, john lucas. tupper, Sir Charles http://www.slider.com/Reference/Biography/T.htm
Thomas Woolner By J. L. Tupper Thomas Woolner. john lucas tupper. john lucas tupper, a minor PreRaphaelite sculptor, poet, theorist of art education, and Rugby drawing master, wrote this contemporary appreciation of his friend Woolner. Stephens, Tom Taylor, and john L. tupper. London Seeley, Jackson, and Halliday http://www.thecore.nus.edu/landow/victorian/sculpture/woolner/tupper.html
Extractions: John Lucas Tupper , a minor Pre-Raphaelite sculptor, poet, theorist of art education, and Rugby drawing master, wrote this contemporary appreciation of his friend Woolner. The essay first appeared in The Portfolio and was scanned from the reprinted book version: English Artists of the Present Day. Essays by J. Beavington Atkinson, Sidney Colvin, F. G. Stephens, Tom Taylor, and John L. Tupper . London: Seeley, Jackson, and Halliday, 1872, 56-60. Following the house style of the Victorian Web , titles of works appear in bold font rather than between single quotes. I have also added more paragraphing to Tupper's text. [ GPL The artist whose name is henceforth to shed splendour upon the Royal Academy , as well as upon this country, and whose works we are about to notice, has perhaps better claims than any sculptor since Flaxman to be associated with the poet-artists. Why artists in marble are, for the most part, so much more nearly allied to stone-masons than their pictorial brothers are to house-painters, is a question too deeply founded in aesthetics, and perhaps in ethics, for present discussion, though the subject of this notice being a happy exception to the modern rule, is an event we may safely ascribe to the fact of his having been by nature's design a poet in the first place, and a sculptor only in the second. Twenty years back, when Mr. Woolner was unknown to the world, he contributed to a short-lived periodical, called The Germ , a poem which, for originality of style and matter, should have conferred upon its author (even had his subsequent matured work been wanting) the rank of no common poet.
Title Change Alexander tupper, the brother of john lucas tupper, suggested the name Art andPoetry. According to WMR s PRB Journal, there had been some discussion of http://www.iath.virginia.edu/courses/ennc986/class/germ3/artpoetry.html
Extractions: As a result of a conversation during a meeting on 13 March 1850, at which WMR, DGR, Brown, Hunt, and the Tuppers were present, it was decided that the title of the PRB house journal should be changed. Alexander Tupper, the brother of John Lucas Tupper, suggested the name "Art and Poetry." According to WMR's PRB Journal , there had been some discussion of changing the title since at least 23 February, the chief alternative title under consideration at that time being "The Artist," a suggestion of DGR's. WMR notes in his preface to the 1901 facsimile edition of The Germ that "[w]hen the third number of the magazine was about to appear, with a change of title from "The Germ" to "Art and Poetry," two fly-sheets were drawn up, more, I think, by Messrs. Tupper the printing-firm than by myself. They contain some "Opinions of the Press," already referred to in this Introduction, and an explanation as to the change of title." A reproduction of these fly-sheets may be found here
HighIndex - Arts: Art History: Artists: T James; » Titian; » Toorop, Jan; » ToulouseLautrec, Henri de. » tupper,john lucas; » Turner, JMW; » Twachtman, john H. More Resources. http://www.highindex.com/Arts/Art_History/Artists/T/
Detailed Record A PreRaphaelite friendship the correspondence of William Holman Hunt and johnlucas tupper By William Holman Hunt ; john lucas tupper ; James H Coombs http://worldcatlibraries.org/wcpa/ow/52610d54e665c28ea19afeb4da09e526.html