Kate Dobbin RHA (1868–1955) was a British watercolourist who specialised in impressionistic watercolours of Irish country scenes and still-lives of flowers.
Dobbin was born Kate Wise in Bristol, England in 1868. She moved to Cork in 1887, where she met and married Cork’s High Sheriff and merchant, Alfred Graham Dobbin. Dobbin studied at the Crawford Municipal School of Art from 1891 to 1895 under the tuition Harry Scully. Dobbin died in the South Infirmary Victoria University Hospital, Cork in 1955.
Dobbins’ impressionistic style has been compared to that of Rose Maynard Barton. From 1894 to 1947, she contributed higher than 100 artworks to the Royal Hibernian Academy’s Annual Exhibition in Dublin. Her speciality was landscapes of County Cork and Connemara, but she after that produced flower paintings and a little number of portraits. Water Colour Society of Ireland exhibited her conduct yourself from 1899 until her death. Her play-act was afterward exhibited by the Munster Fine Art Club and the Fine Art Society in London. Dobbin suffered with prickly arthritis, but continued to paint into her 80s.
Dobbin’s put on an act was not lonesome of rural landscapes, but with the streets, the rivers and estuaries of Cork city. Dobbin and her husband Sir Alfred Dobbin are both represented in the accrual of the Crawford Art Gallery, Cork, Ireland.
What do you think of the works of Kate Dobbin?
Use the form below to say your opinion about Kate Dobbin. All opinions are welcome!