Berry F. Berry

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Berry Francis Berry (3 December 1852 – 4 December 1926) was an English painter and book illustrator.[1] He was born in Barrow Hill, St John's Wood, London, to George Berry and Ann Woods. On 24 June 1880 he married Amy Palmer Goodall in Fulham, London; they moved to Chiswick and had four children. In 1895 he was principal of "The Berry Art School" at 86 Fellows Road, Swiss Cottage, offering tuition in drawing and painting, the main element being life drawing. Landscape classes were offered in summer.[2] Berry illustrated F. A. S. Reid's 1881 children's book Comic Insects, published by Frederick Warne.[3] He contributed a painting to an 1882 book Bedford Park, celebrating the then-fashionable garden suburb of that name.[4] He died in 1926 in South Hampstead, London.

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Berry F Berry". AskArt. Retrieved 5 August 2021.
  2. ^ Mackenzie, Tessa (1895). The Art Schools of London. London: Chapman & Hall. pp. 11–12.
  3. ^ "print; book-illustration; album (Museum number 1913,0415.202)". British Museum. Retrieved 5 August 2021.
  4. ^ Dollman, John Charles; Hargitt, Edward; Harrison, Thomas Erat; Jackson, F. Hamilton; Nash, Joseph Jr.; Paget, H. M.; Rooke, Thomas; Trautschold, Manfred; Brooks, Vincent; Carr, Jonathan T.; Berry, Berry F. (1882). Bedford Park. Harrison and Sons. OCLC 193146366.