Artist

> Nicol Jnr, Erskine Edward (1825–1904)

Erskine Edward Nicol was the son of Scottish artist Erskine Nicol RSA ARA (1825–1904), a successful painter of figurative, landscape and genre subjects, whose works are in the British Museum, Tate, National Galleries of Scotland and National Gallery of Ireland among others.

Nicol Jnr was born in London, his father having worked previously in both Edinburgh and Dublin. In 1892 and 1896 Nicol Jnr made two extended visits to Egypt with the Scottish artist Edwin John Alexander RA RWS RSW (1870–1926), son of the animal painter Robert Alexander RSA RSW (1840–1923). Edwin Alexander was enamoured with the country and lived on a houseboat on the Nile for four years—the young Erskine Nicol no doubt developed his interest in the country at this time too.

In the late 1880s Edwin Alexander had travelled in Morocco with his father and the Scottish painter Joseph Crawhall (1861–1913), who had a profound influence on his own style. It is likely that, in turn, Erskine Nicol was influenced by the style of his friend Edwin, and the work of the wider Glasgow artists more generally.

The so-called Glasgow Boys were a group of artists painting at the turn of the 19th and 20th centuries, whose work represents the beginning of modernism in Scotland. Disillusioned with academic painting, they preferred to work directly from their subjects outdoors, and their work incorporated elements of Impressionism, the flattened forms of Japanese prints, and bold and vigorous handling of paint. Many of the artists travelled abroad, seeking influences of the exotic and the decorative; Arthur Melville (who was closely associated with the group) focused on North Africa in particular, including Egypt.

Erskine Nicol married the amateur artist Cecilia Marion Frere, with whom he had one daughter, Mary, born at Trevor Square, Knightsbridge in 1913. The young family travelled widely and lived in numerous locations, in the United States, Italy, France and Egypt, where Erskine painted watercolours to be brought back and sold in England.

Mary Nicol (later Leakey) began to develop an enthusiasm for Egyptology during these travels. She would go on to become a celebrated archaeologist and paleoanthropologist, who first discovered evidence of early human life in the Rift Valley of East Africa.

1 artworks

Erskine Edward Nicol Junior
Erskine Edward Nicol Jnr Egypt Sands
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